The years after World War I saw a different sort of war in the
American South, as Modernism began to contest the "New South Creed"
for the allegiance of Southern intellectuals. In
The War
Within, Daniel Joseph Singal examines the struggle between the
characteristic culture of twentieth-century America and the South's
tenacious blend of Victorianism and the Cavalier myth. He explores
the lives and works of historians Ulrich B. Phillips and Broadus
Mitchell; novelists Ellen Glasgow, William Faulkner, and Robert
Penn Warren; publisher William T. Couch; sociologists Howard Odum,
Rupert Vance, Guy Johnson, and Arthur Raper; and Agrarian poets
John Crowe Ransom, Donald Davidson, and Allen Tate.
The drama Singal unfolds is as much national as regional in its
implications. His sophisticated and original analysis of the
complex relationship between these southern writers and their
heritage enables him to trace the transition to Modernism with
unusual clarity and to address questions of major importance in
American intellectual history: How did Modernism come into being?
Does it display a fundamental, underlying pattern? What are its
essential values, beliefs, and assumptions?
Singal marshals archival and published sources and combines them
with oral history interviews to trace this process of change on the
levels of both formal thought and individual experience. He uses
the interwar South as the locale for a pioneering examination of
the momentous change that has affected all of Western culture.