{ 249 } notes Abbreviations Used in the Notes APP Austin Peay Papers (Governor), Tennessee State Library and Archives, Nashville, Tennessee DDP Donald Davidson Papers, Jean and Alexander Heard Library, Special Collections, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee FBC FitzGerald Bemiss Collection, Virginia Historical Collection, Richmond, Virginia JJKP James Jackson Kilpatrick Papers, Albert and Shirley Small Special Collections, Mary and David Harrison Institute for American History, Literature, and Culture, University of Virginia, Charlottesville, Virginia RVHD Records of the Virginia House of Delegates, Office of the Clerk, 1956 Constitutional Convention, State Library and Archives, Library of Virginia, Richmond, Virginia WJBCP William Jennings Bryan College Papers, Office of Richard M. Cornelius, Scopes Archivist and Professor Emeritus of English, William Jennings Bryan College, Dayton, Tennessee. This unarchived material was accessed and copied via permission from Professor Richard M. Cornelius in January 2006. Author and publisher have retained copies. Introduction 1. Eleanor Roosevelt, quoted in Debnam, Weep No More, 10. 2. Leggett, “Between You and Me.” 3. Debnam, Weep No More, 19. 4. Ibid., 9. 5. Ibid., 4. 6. Hobson, Tell about the South, 11–12. 7. Green, “Resurgent Southern Sectionalism,” 225. 8. Gerald W. Johnson, “Critical Attitudes North and South,” 575. 9. Tindall, “Benighted South,” 281. 10. Anderson, Eyes Off the Prize, 74–77; Dudziak, Cold War Civil Rights, 43–44; Woodward , Strange Career of Jim Crow, 132–33. 11. Odum, Southern Regions of the United States, 13–15. 12. Adler, Superiority and Social Interest, 54. 13. Orgler, Alfred Adler, 64. 14. Woodcock, Foreword to Alfred Adler, 6. 15. Stepansky, In Freud’s Shadow, 242. 250 } Notes to Pages 7–14 16. Lundin, Alfred Adler’s Basic Concepts and Implications, 147. 17. Grey, Alfred Adler, 55. 18. Rattner, Alfred Adler, 37. 19. Frank, Routledge Historical Atlas, 128, 131. 20. John Shelton Reed, Enduring South, 67. 21. Carson and Holloran, Knock at Midnight, 167. 22. Way, “Psychology of Prejudice,” 249. 23. Guindon, Green, and Hanna, “Intolerance and Psychopathology,” 167. 24. Powers, “Myth and Memory,” 271. 25. Ibid., 274. 26. Ibid., 277. 27. Other studies, such as Dhirendra Narain’s “Indian National Character in the Twentieth Century,” which appeared in Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science in 1967, and more recently in Yan Wang’s article, “Value Changes in an Era of Social Transformations: College-Educated Chinese Youth, published in Educational Studies in 2006, and Joanna Kurczewska’s piece, “What Is Likely to Happen to Polish Collective Consciousness after Accession to the European Union,” from a 2003 issue of the Polish Sociological Review, continue to examine the idea of a collective cultural inferiority complex. 28. Brachfield, Inferiority Feelings in the Individual and the Group, 269. 29. Ibid., 270. 30. Ibid. 31. Ibid., 271. 32. Orgler, Alfred Adler, 81. 33. Whitehead, “Man to Man Violence,” 416. 34. Killian, White Southerners, 26. 35. Ibid., 111. 36. Ibid., 112. 37. Cobb, Redefining Southern Culture, 44. 38. Kirby, Media-Made Dixie, 83. 39. John Shelton Reed, Enduring South, 89. 40. Cobb, Redefining Southern Culture, 4. 41. Woodward, Strange Career of Jim Crow, 119. 42. Howard Odum, quoted in ibid. 43. Wilson, Baptized in Blood, 1. 44. Connelly and Bellows, God and General Longstreet, 22. 45. Wilson, Baptized in Blood, 7. 46. Calhoun, “Speech on the Reception of Abolition Petitions,” 12. 47. Woodward, Burden of Southern History, 66. 48. Ibid., 67. 49. Ibid., 110. 50. Grantham, The South in Modern America, 333. 51. Ibid., xv–xvi. 52. Silber, Romance of Reunion, 94. 53. Kirby, Media-Made Dixie, 1. 54. Woodward, Burden of Southern History, 2. [35.175.212.5] Project MUSE (2024-03-29 03:08 GMT) Notes to Pages 15–24 { 251 55. Woodward, Strange Career of Jim Crow, 72. 56. Grantham, The South in Modern America, 39. 57. Ibid. 58. Woodward, Burden of Southern History, xii. 59. Link, Road to the White House, 2. 60. Quoted in Grantham, The South in Modern America, 63. 61. Quoted in Wilson, Baptized in Blood, 180. 62. “Lynchings: By Year and Race,” www.law.umkc.edu/faculty/projects/ftrials/shipp/ lynchingyear.html. 63. Tindall, Ethnic Southerners, 53. 64. Ibid., 50. 65. Ibid., 49. 66. Mencken, “Sahara of the Bozart,” 229. 67. Debnam, Weep No More, 29. 68. Ibid. 69. Mencken, quoted in Cooper and Terrill, American South, 664. 70. Roosevelt, “My Day.” 71. Duck, Nation’s Region, 3. 72. Woodward, Burden of Southern History, 229. 73. Taylor, Cavalier and Yankee, 17–18. 74. Cash, Mind of the South, 68. 75. Ruffin, “Political Economy of Slavery,” 76. 76. Fitzhugh, “Sociology for the South...