This collection of eight previously published essays, three comments, three afterwords, a book review, and a short excerpt from a book explicates and challenges the most influential monograph ever written about post-Reconstruction Southern history. More uneven than most collections, it reveals as much about trends in the profession as about C. Vann Woodward’s masterpiece
A review of Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, by Charles Reagan Wilson and William Ferri
Once in a generation it seems, a historian writes a book that literally changes the landscape of the...
In April 1996 James Axtell, Kenan Professor of Humanities at William and Mary College, gave the fift...
This collection of eight previously published essays, three comments, three afterwords, a book revi...
After more than two decades, Origins of the New South is still recognized both as a classic in regio...
C. Vann Woodward\u27s The Burden of Southern History remains one of the essential history texts of o...
A sweeping historiographical collection, Reinterpreting Southern Histories updates and expands upon ...
In this broad, ambitious, and important book, Jonathan M. Wiener argues that the black belt planter...
Because I came to southern history late and somewhat reluctantly, that last graduate seminar class t...
THE SOUTHERN COLONIAL FRONTIER, 1607-1763, by W. Stitt Robinson, reviewed by Kenneth Coleman; THE RE...
The writings of historian C. Vann Woodward (1908-1999) challenged the widely-held misconceptions reg...
At a public picnic in the South in the 1890s, a young man paid five cents for his first chance to he...
According to the author, this work is about an industry that made something from nothing, and I su...
Presented as a tribute to Eugene D. Genovese, the ten substantial and arresting essays in Slavery, S...
Book Reviews edited by Walter Darrell Haden The Improbable Era: The South Since World War II, Robert...
A review of Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, by Charles Reagan Wilson and William Ferri
Once in a generation it seems, a historian writes a book that literally changes the landscape of the...
In April 1996 James Axtell, Kenan Professor of Humanities at William and Mary College, gave the fift...
This collection of eight previously published essays, three comments, three afterwords, a book revi...
After more than two decades, Origins of the New South is still recognized both as a classic in regio...
C. Vann Woodward\u27s The Burden of Southern History remains one of the essential history texts of o...
A sweeping historiographical collection, Reinterpreting Southern Histories updates and expands upon ...
In this broad, ambitious, and important book, Jonathan M. Wiener argues that the black belt planter...
Because I came to southern history late and somewhat reluctantly, that last graduate seminar class t...
THE SOUTHERN COLONIAL FRONTIER, 1607-1763, by W. Stitt Robinson, reviewed by Kenneth Coleman; THE RE...
The writings of historian C. Vann Woodward (1908-1999) challenged the widely-held misconceptions reg...
At a public picnic in the South in the 1890s, a young man paid five cents for his first chance to he...
According to the author, this work is about an industry that made something from nothing, and I su...
Presented as a tribute to Eugene D. Genovese, the ten substantial and arresting essays in Slavery, S...
Book Reviews edited by Walter Darrell Haden The Improbable Era: The South Since World War II, Robert...
A review of Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, by Charles Reagan Wilson and William Ferri
Once in a generation it seems, a historian writes a book that literally changes the landscape of the...
In April 1996 James Axtell, Kenan Professor of Humanities at William and Mary College, gave the fift...