288 pages / 6.00 x 9.00 inches / 4 line drawings
History / United States - Southern History
In 1949 Frank Owsley’s seminal work, Plain Folk in the Old South, argued that a thriving middle class represented the majority of southerners and was integral to the region’s development. In the spirit of Owsley’s effort to expand understanding of the south, the selections included here provide fresh perspectives on the complexities of the plain folk culture. The section “Home, Labor, and Leisure” reassigns responsibility for innovations in the arts and economy of the southern middle class. The section “Social Groups and Attitudes” contains Sally G. McMillen’s piece on the Sunday-school movement. Lacy K. Ford’s tract on the limits of egalitarianism is one of the topics considered in the third part, “Plain Folk Democracy and Its Limits.”
Samuel C. Hyde, Jr., is Leon Ford professor of history at Southeastern Louisiana University and the director of the Center for Southeast Louisiana Studies. He is the author and editor of numerous books about the history of Louisiana's Florida Parishes, including, A Fierce and Fractious Frontier. The Curious Development of Louisiana's Florida Parishes, 1699-2000.
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