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- Southern Cultures
- The University of North Carolina Press
- Article
- "He Put His Thumb Up to His Nose, And Twirl'd His Fingers at His Foes": Presidential Campaign Songs in 1844 Volume 4, Number 1, 1998, pp. 139-148
To further meet your research needs, the complete digital issue from this journal is also available for purchase for $12.00 USD.
This issue contains 22 articles in total
- About the Contributors & Editors
- Introduction
- Store Lunch
- "He Put His Thumb Up to His Nose, And Twirl'd His Fingers at His Foes": Presidential Campaign Songs in 1844
- Rhapsodies in Black Art of the Harlem Renaissance (review)
- A New Life Stories and Photographs from the Suburban South (review)
- Ghost Dancing on the Cracker Circuit The Culture of Festivals in the American South (review)
- Tales of the South (review)
- Mothers of Invention Women of the Slaveholding South in the American Civil War (review)
- Slavery and the American West The Eclipse of Manifest Destiny and the Coming of the Civil War (review)
- Reading, Writing, and Race The Desegregation of the Charlotte Schools (review)
- Mule Train: A Thirty-Year Perspective on the Southern Christian Leadership Conference's Poor People's Campaign of 1968
- Reflections on Redistricting
- Can the Flower of Southern Womanhood Bloom in the Garden of Southern Politics?
- High Costs of Winning—And Losing
- Follow the Money
- A Political Paradox: North Carolina's Twenty-Five Years Under Jim Hunt and Jesse Helms
- Between a Rock and a Hard Place: South Carolina's Republican Presidential Primary
- "The Dread Handwriting is on the Wall": Confronting the New Republican South
- Whither Southern Republicans?
- The Black and the Gray: An Interview with Tony Horwitz
- Front Porch
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