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Mr. Skylark
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 410

Mr. Skylark

Based on years of research and thousands of notes left by John Bennett, Mr. Skylark is an unusually intimate biography of a pivotal figure in the Charleston Renaissance, the brief period between the two World Wars that first witnessed many of the cultural and artistic changes soon to sweep the South. The book not only examines Bennett's life but also reveals the rich tapestry of the literary and social history of Charleston. An outsider who became an insider by marrying into the local aristocracy, Bennett was perfectly placed to observe social and artistic change and to prompt it. He published the first scholarly treatise on Gullah, the language of the coastal Southern blacks, and collected ...

An Old Creed for the New South
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 338

An Old Creed for the New South

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2008-02-12
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  • Publisher: SIU Press

An Old Creed for the New South:Proslavery Ideology and Historiography, 1865–1918 details the slavery debate from the Civil War through World War I. Award-winning historian John David Smith argues that African American slavery remained a salient metaphor for how Americans interpreted contemporary race relations decades after the Civil War. Smith draws extensively on postwar articles, books, diaries, manuscripts, newspapers, and speeches to counter the belief that debates over slavery ended with emancipation. After the Civil War, Americans in both the North and the South continued to debate slavery’s merits as a labor, legal, and educational system and as a mode of racial control. The stud...

The Conservative Regime
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 244

The Conservative Regime

This edition of The Conservative Regime is augmented by a new preface from Cooper.

A Devil and a Good Woman, Too
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 394

A Devil and a Good Woman, Too

The first full-scale biography of the South Carolina writer and winner of the Pulitzer Prize follows her pioneering work as a chronicler of the collapse of Southern plantation life and its effect on African Americans. UP.

Through the Heart of Dixie
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 317

Through the Heart of Dixie

Through the Heart of Dixie: Sherman's March and American Memory

Slavery, Race and American History
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 257

Slavery, Race and American History

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2015-03-04
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  • Publisher: Routledge

These essays introduce the complexities of researching and analyzing race. This book focuses on problems confronted while researching, writing and interpreting race and slavery, such as conflict between ideological perspectives, and changing interpretations of the questions.

The Dunning School
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 434

The Dunning School

From the late nineteenth century until World War I, a group of Columbia University students gathered under the mentorship of the renowned historian William Archibald Dunning (1857–1922). Known as the Dunning School, these students wrote the first generation of state studies on the Reconstruction—volumes that generally sympathized with white southerners, interpreted radical Reconstruction as a mean-spirited usurpation of federal power, and cast the Republican Party as a coalition of carpetbaggers, freedmen, scalawags, and former Unionists. Edited by the award-winning historian John David Smith and J. Vincent Lowery, The Dunning School focuses on this controversial group of historians and ...

A Bluestocking in Charleston
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 356

A Bluestocking in Charleston

  • Categories: Art

In early 20th-century Charleston, Laura Bragg was called a woman ahead of her time, a fresh drink of water in a cultural desert, but never a proper Southern lady. This biography tells the story of the woman who changed the cultural face of Charleston and the nation's approach to museum education.

City of the Silent
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 242

City of the Silent

A guide to more than two hundred of the most famous, infamous, and influential individuals now interred in the iconic Charleston landmark Charleston is a city of stories. As in any city of historical significance, some of its best stories now lie buried with its dead. Ted Ashton Phillips, Jr., was custodian of many of the stories of those Charlestonians interred in Magnolia Cemetery, the picturesque burial ground located along the Cooper River north of downtown. Phillips's fascination with Magnolia began at the age of sixteen, when he worked there as a groundskeeper and assistant gravedigger. He followed his passion into the research represented in this collective biography of more than two ...

Catalog of Copyright Entries
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 1332

Catalog of Copyright Entries

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 1922
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  • Publisher: Unknown

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