Schooling the New South deftly combines social and political
history, gender studies, and African American history into a story
of educational reform. James Leloudis recreates North Carolina's
classrooms as they existed at the turn of the century and explores
the wide-ranging social and psychological implications of the
transition from old-fashioned common schools to modern graded
schools. He argues that this critical change in methods of
instruction both reflected and guided the transformation of the
American South. According to Leloudis, architects of the New South
embraced the public school as an institution capable of remodeling
their world according to the principles of free labor and market
exchange. By altering habits of learning, they hoped to instill in
students a vision of life that valued individual ambition and
enterprise above the familiar relations of family, church, and
community. Their efforts eventually created both a social and a
pedagogical revolution, says Leloudis. Public schools became what
they are today--the primary institution responsible for the
socialization of children and therefore the principal battleground
for society's conflicts over race, class, and gender. Southern
History/Education/North Carolina