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What Made the South Different?

Edited by Kees Gispen

200 pages (approx.) 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 in., index

9781617030628 Paper $30.00D

Paper, $30.00

A scholarly collection that shows the American South in comparative perspective

With essays and commentaries by Edward Ayers, Shearer Bowman, Michael Craton, Barbara Fields, Elizabeth Fox-Genovese, George Frederickson, Eugene Genovese, Richard Graham, Steven Hahn, Richard King, and Peter Kolchin

What made the American South different? This ever-fascinating question is approached from a new angle in this engaging collection of essays originally presented in 1989 at the University of Mississippi in the Chancellor's Symposium lectures.

By comparing the South with other cultures and by placing the southern experience in the broad context of world history, this volume brings into sharp focus the contours of southern peculiarity. Reconciling the incongruities became a formative experience for the American South, as well as a feat by which the South produced its own unique, contradictory culture.

Kees Gispen is an associate professor of history at the University of Mississippi. He is the author of New Profession, Old Order: Engineers and German Society, 1815-1914 and a contributor to German Professions, 1850-1950 .

200 pages (approx.) 5 1/2 x 8 1/2 in., index