Songs of the Reconstructing South: Building Literary Louisiana, 1865-1945
By (Author) Suzanne Disheroon-Green
Edited by Lisa Abney
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
30th March 2002
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Literary studies: c 1900 to c 2000
Social and cultural history
810.99763
Hardback
240
Explores the influences at work on Louisiana writers and those writing about Louisiana from the end of the Civil War through World War II. The South has a rich cultural legacy and that of Louisiana is especially strong and diverse. Despite its similarities with the rest of the South, Louisiana has a distinct cultural identity rooted in the colonial impulses of France and Spain, the evolution of gender roles, the importance of religion, and the dramatic shift in racial politics after the 1803 Louisiana Purchase. Perhaps because of its diversity, it has inspired numerous writers, some of whom have contributed greatly to American literature. This book explores the influences at work on Louisiana writers and those writing about Louisiana from the end of the Civil War through World War II. These writers reflect the effects of Louisiana's culture, politics, and colonial heritage. Such writers as Alice Dunbar-Nelson, Lyle Saxon, and George Washington Cable characterize the racial caste system, pointing out the flaws in its construction and its effects on relationships. Ruth McEnery Stuart, Kate Chopin, and Sallie Rhett Roman depict the lives of women in Louisiana and their struggles when taking on nontraditional roles. And William Faulkner and Arna Bontemps draw upon narrative and folk traditions, which provide the foundations for their works. Chapters are grouped in sections devoted to three of the broadest influences on writers of the era: women, work, and culture during Reconstruction; the impact of Modernism; and issues of race and class.
[T]hought-provoking and informative looks at the writers who helped build literary Louisiana. Recommended for all libraries with collections pertaining to Louisiana and Southern literature.-Louisiana Libraries
The late Professor George Reinecke, who pioneered efforts to reprint Louisiana writers in the 1970s with the advances and revivals in Songs of the Reconstructing South.-South Central Review
Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.-Choice
Upper-division undergraduates through faculty.Choice
"Thought-provoking and informative looks at the writers who helped build literary Louisiana. Recommended for all libraries with collections pertaining to Louisiana and Southern literature."-Louisiana Libraries
"The late Professor George Reinecke, who pioneered efforts to reprint Louisiana writers in the 1970s with the advances and revivals in Songs of the Reconstructing South."-South Central Review
"Upper-division undergraduates through faculty."-Choice
"[T]hought-provoking and informative looks at the writers who helped build literary Louisiana. Recommended for all libraries with collections pertaining to Louisiana and Southern literature."-Louisiana Libraries
Suzanne Disheroon- Green is Assistant Professor of American Literature at Northwestern State University. Her previous books include Kate Chopin: An Annotated Bibliography of Critical Works (Greenwood, 1999), Songs of the New South: Writing Contemporary Louisiana (Greenwood, 2001), and At Fault by Kate Chopin: A Scholarly Edition with Background Readings (2001). Lisa Abney is Director of the Louisiana Folklife Center and Assistant Professor of English at Northwestern State University. She coedited Songs of the New South: Writing Contemporary Louisiana (Greenwood, 2001) and has served as guest editor for Southern Studies. She is also the general editor of Louisiana Folklife.