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NEW DIRECTIONS IN SOUTHERN HISTORY
Series editors:
Peter S. Carmichael, West Virginia University
Michele Gillespie, Wake Forest University
William A. Link, University of Florida
This series will explore new topics of race, ethnicity, gender, sexuality, and culture, contributing in important new ways to the historiography of the region, and adding significantly to our understanding of the relationship between the South and the rest of the nation. The series will stimulate the exploration, development, and use of non-traditional source materials, including material cultural sources. The series will be distinguished by well-written, deeply researched books—by new as well as established scholars—that offer fresh, compelling ways to understand the southern past.
The series will focus particularly on works that transcend traditional chronological barriers that artificially divide nineteenth- and twentieth-century southern history. We desire manuscripts that explore sweeping social changes, but these regional studies must be firmly rooted within a broader national and international perspective. We also desire manuscripts that cannot be easily classified as being cultural, political, or social history. Finally, we seek manuscripts that bring together these various subfields and are ultimately connected to questions about how power has been exerted, contested, and acknowledged in the South.
Please send inquiries to Anne Dean Watkins, Assistant Acquisitions Editor. Go here for contact info.
Books in the series:
Becoming Bourgeois: Merchant Culture in the South, 1820-1865
by Frank J. Byrne
Southern Farmers and Their Stories: Memory and Meaning in Oral History by Melissa Walker
The View from the Ground: Experiences of Civil War Soldiers Edited by Aaron Sheehan-Dean
Lum and Abner: Rural America and the Golden Age of Radio by Randal L. Hall
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