The South often seems like a foreign country to newcomers from
other parts of the United States. And for people from other
countries, Southern customs and lifestyle can be even more
bewildering. For anyone who has ever wondered why the style of
conducting busines in the South is different or why some
Southerners are still fighting the Civil War, this book will be a
valuable guide. The informative and entertaining essays will help
new Southerners understand and appreciate the region and its
people, and they will also serve as a refresher course on the South
for those who are comfortably settled in.
Each of the essays adopts a different perspective to suggest just
how the South is different from other American regions. In turn,
they examine the special meaning of history for Southerners, the
boundaries of the South as a geographical and as an imaginary
region, the rhetoric and the reality of Southern race relations,
the South's change from a rural to a metropolitan culture, the myth
of the Southern belle and the reality of Southern women's lives,
the political metamorphosis that turned the Solid South into the
Solid
Republican South, and the recent transformation of the
poorest region in the country into an economic wonder called the
Sunbelt.
Readers will learn that when Southerners ask strangers what church
they attend, the intent is not to pry but to be friendly. They will
also discover that "where the kudzu grows" is one of the best ways
to define
where the South is located.
The essays offer the insights of both shcolarship and experience,
for the contributors -- most of them originally non-Southerners --
learned about this region by living in it as well as studying
it.
The contributors are Julia Kirk Blackwelder, Paul D. Escott, David
R. Goldfield, Nell Irvin Painter, John Shelton Reed, and Thomas E.
Terrill.