Summer ‘10

Southern Cultures volume 16, number 2:
SOUTHERN LIVES

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Front Porch

by Harry L. Watson

Stereotypes from Dixie crowd American fiction, film, music, and consciousness, and we all know people who seem to fit one of the molds.”

 

Becoming Billy Carter

Clothes Make the Man (and His Many Characters)

by José Blanco F.

The regulars at the station had great fun with the press. The station was home to some of the greatest liars and bullshit artists in the history of the world, and tabloid reporters were nothing more than a light snack before lunch for them.”

           

Voices from the Southern Oral History Program

“I train the people to do their own talking”:
Septima Clark and Women in the Civil Rights Movement

from interviews by Jacquelyn Dowd Hall and Eugene P. Walker

by Katherine Mellen Charron and David P. Cline
introduced by Katherine Mellen Charron

They don't give the women any of the glory.”

           

“My idol was Langston Hughes”:

The Poet, the Renaissance, and Their Enduring Influence

from a talk delivered by Margaret Walker Alexander

edited and introduced by William R. Ferris

As a small child in the 1920s, I was very much affected by the Harlem Renaissance. As early as age eleven, I had read poetry by Langston Hughes.”

 

Voices from the Southern Oral History Program

Learning from the Long Civil Rights Movement’s First Generation:

Virginia Foster Durr

from interviews by M. Sue Thrasher, Jacquelyn Dowd Hall, and Bob Hall

compiled and introduced by Sarah Thuesen

So I took each in turn, and they told me why they hated white folks. This took quite a while, because they were extremely articulate about why they hated white folks.”

 

Just As I Am Not

A Poet Visits the Billy Graham Library

by Michael McFee

Do they keep an eye out for the possible wayward soul (like, say, a middle-aged guy with scraggly graying hair who stays at the margins of the group and keeps scribbling in a little black book) and hope—no, pray—that the cheerful performance of their duties and the powerful unfolding of Billy Graham’s life and message might lead this poor lost person to accept Jesus Christ as his personal Lord and Savior?

           

Mason-Dixon Lines
So Then

poetry by Murray B. Shugars

So, you get up and pilfer a cigarette

from your lover’s pack, smoke it in blue

moonlight pushing through the bare

kitchen window. Someone is listening.”

 

Not Forgotten
Albert Murray’s Magical Youth

by David A. Taylor

“‘In America they get away from race by saying ‘minority.’ But who the hell’s the best minority in the world? The hero! You know what I’m saying? That’s always a minority.’

 

About the Contributors


“The rich array of photographs and graphics, and the sincere and effective attempt at readerly appeal, go well beyond what is attempted by most… Southern Cultures is truly impressive.” —Council of Editors of Learned Journals

About the Contributors