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Contents for Volumes 1-2 Articles and Features Landmarks of Power: Building a Southern Past, 1855-1915, by Catherine W. Bishir (inaug.), p. 5. The Southern Accent—Alive and Well, by Michael Montgomery (inaug.), p. 47. The Anxiety of History: The Southern Confrontation with Modernity, by Elizabeth FoxGenovese (inaug.), p. 65. The Narrative of John Henry Martin, by Sherman A. James (inaug.), p. 83. South Polls, by John Shelton Reed (inaug.), p. 129. Southward, Ho! Mapping the Archival South, by David Moltke-Hansen (inaug.), p. 133. The Death of Southern Heroes: Historic Funerals of the South, by Charles Reagan Wilson (1. 1), p.3. Seeing the Highlands, 1900-1939: Southwestern Virginia through the Lens of TR. Phelps, by David Moltke-Hansen (1. 1), p. 23. From J/ Trovatore to the Crazy Mountaineers: The Rise and Fall of Elevated Culture on WBT-Charlotte, 1922-1930, by Pamela Grundy (1. 1), p. 51. Paul Green and the Southern Literary Renaissance, by John Herbert Roper (1. 1), p. 75. South Polls: Images of Southern Women, by John Shelton Reed (1. 1), p. 125. Southward, Ho! Unlocking Photographs, by Ellen Garrison (1. 1), p. 129. Not Forgotten: Incident at the Depot, by Paul Green (1. 1), p. 133. A Short History of Redneck: The Fashioning of a Southern White Masculine Identity, by Patrick Huber (1. Z), p. 145. "Millways" Remembered: A Conversation with Kenneth and Margaret Morland (1. 2), p. 167. The Law and the Code in Harper Lee's To Kill A Mockingbird, by Robert O. Stephens (1. 2), p. 215. Saturday Night in Country Music: The Gospel According to Juke, by Stephen A. Smith and Jimmie N. Rogers (1. 2), p. 229. South Polls: Southern Manners, by John Shelton Reed (1. 2), p. 277. Southward, Ho! The Microfilm South, by David Moltke-Hansen (1. 2), p. 281. Not Forgotten: The Southern Martial Tradition: A Memory, by Louis D. Rubin, Jr. (1. 2), p. 289. "How 'bout a Hand for the Hog": The Enduring Nature of the Swine as a Cultural Symbol in the South, by Jonathan Bass (1. 3), p. 301. 462Southern Cultures "Sweet Home Alabama": Southern Culture and the American Search for Community, by Paul Harvey (1. 3), p. 321. Reflections on Southern Intellectuals, by Richard H. King (1. 3), p. 335. Sartoris Resartus, by Charles Joyner (1. 3), p. 347. South Polls: An Embattled Emblem, by John Shelton Reed (1. 3), p. 393. Southward, Ho! Political Culture and Present History, by Herbert J. Hartsook (1. 3), p. 399. Not Forgotten: "A Poor Dinner it Was": 1860 and the Politics of Barbecue (1. 3), p. 411. White Honor, Black Humor, and the Making of a Southern Style, by Johanna Nicol Shields (1. 4), p. 421. Southern Literature and Folk Humor, by William Ferris (1. 4), p. 431. Adventures in a "Foreign Country": African American Humor and the South, by Trudier Harris (1. 4), p. 457. The Incredible Shrinking You-Know-What: Southern Women's Humor, by Anne Goodwyn Jones (1. 4), p. 467. Fourteen Types of Ambiguity, by William Koon (1. 4), p. 473. "Damn, Brother! I Don't Believe I'd A-ToId That!": Humor and Southern Cultural Identity , by James C. Cobb (1. 4), p. 481. South Polls: Pass the Grits, by John Shelton Reed (1. 4), p. 529. Not Forgotten: Yesterday a Total Stranger Called Me White Trash, by Tone Blevins (1. 4), p. 533. Memory and the South, by Edward L. Ayers (2. 1), p. 5. What Is Social Memory? by Scot A. French (2. 1), p. 9. Aunt Jemima Explained: The Old South, the Absent Mistress, and the Slave in a Box, by Maurice M. Manring (2. 1), p. 19. Reflections on the Death of Emmett Till, by Anne Sarah Rubin (2. 1), p. 45. "I Ventured to Say I Was a Virginian": Vachel Lindsay and the South, by William R. Irwin (2. 1), p. 67. The Sacrament of Remembrance: Donald Davidson and the Southern Past, by Paul V. Murphy (2. 1), p. 83. South Polls: "You-all" Spoken Here, by John Shelton Reed (2. 1), p. 125. Southward, Ho! Grassroots Environmental History: The Southern Federal Writers' Project Life Histories as a Source, by Jerrold Hirsch...

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