If the nation as a whole during the 1940s was halfway between the
Great Depression of the 1930s and the postwar prosperity of the
1950s, the South found itself struggling through an additional
transition, one bound up in an often violent reworking of its own
sense of history and regional identity. Examining the changing
nature of racial politics in the 1940s, McKay Jenkins measures its
impact on white Southern literature, history, and culture.
Jenkins focuses on four white Southern writers--W. J. Cash, William
Alexander Percy, Lillian Smith, and Carson McCullers--to show how
they constructed images of race and race relations within works
that professed to have little, if anything, to do with race. Sexual
isolation further complicated these authors' struggles with issues
of identity and repression, he argues, allowing them to occupy a
space between the privilege of whiteness and the alienation of
blackness. Although their views on race varied tremendously, these
Southern writers' uneasy relationship with their own dominant
racial group belies the idea that "whiteness" was an unchallenged,
monolithic racial identity in the region.