Checkout
- Digital Price: $12.00 USD (All sales final)
- Southern Cultures
- The University of North Carolina Press
- issue
- Volume 5, Number 1, 1999
- About the Contributors
- Oysters Rubinstein: An Afterword
- How Rubenstein Played: from The Old Virginia Gentleman and Other Sketches
- "Hot Music on the Half-Shell For Two": Anton Rubinstein's Southern Fan
- Living and Dying in Dixie
- Mama Don't Allow No Easy Riders Here: Strutting the Dozens, and: Shake Your Wicked Knees: Rent Parties and Good Times (review)
- Mississippi String Bands: Traditional Fiddle Music of Mississippi (review)
- Jim Mills, Bound to Ride, and: Nashville Bluegrass Band, American Beauty (review)
- Conjunto Bernal, 16 Early Tejano Classics, and: Santiago Jiménez Jr., Purely Instrumental (review)
- Go Fast, Turn Left Voices from Orange County Speedway (review)
- A Room Forever The Life, Work, and Letters of Breece D'J Pancake (review)
- Blind Vengeance The Roy Moody Mail Bomb Murders, and: Lay Down with Dogs The Story of Hugh Otis Bynum and the Scottsboro First Monday Bombing (review)
- The Influence of Women on the Southern Landscape Proceedings of the Tenth Conference on Restoring Southern Gardens and Landscapes (review)
- The Indians' New South Cultural Change in the Colonial Southeast (review)
- Long Time Coming Racial Inequality in the Nonmetropolitan South, 1940-1990 (review)
- The Trial of Democracy Black Suffrage and Northern Republicans, 1860-1910 (review)
- Free Blacks in Norfolk, Virginia, 1790-1860 The Darker Side of Freedom (review)
- Southern Strategies Southern Women and the Woman Suffrage Question (review)
- Interracialism and Christian Community in the Postwar South The Story of Koinonia Farm (review)
- A Socialist Utopia in the New South The Ruskin Colonies in Tennessee and Georgia, 1894-1901 (review)
- A Woman's War Southern Women, Civil War, and the Confederate Legacy (review)
- Slave Laws in Virginia (review)
- We've Got to Get Out of This Place: Tony Horwitz Tours the Civil War South
- King of the One-String
- "The Prong of Love"
- "I Was Tellin It": Race, Gender, and the Puzzle of the Storyteller
- Race and the Cloud of Unknowing in Gone with the Wind
- Clutching the Chains That Bind: Margaret Mitchell and Gone with the Wind
- Front Porch
In order to purchase digital content, you must be logged into your MyMUSE account.
For questions, please see Purchasing MUSE Content