Still Rebels, Still Yankees and Other Essays

Still Rebels, Still Yankees and Other Essays - Cover

by Donald Davidson

introduction by Lewis P. Simpson

304 pages / 6.00 x 9.00 inches / no illustrations

History / United States - Southern History

Paperback / 9780807124895 / March 1999

A decade and more has passed since the first publication of Still Rebels, Still Yankees. During that time the book has become recognized as a classic affirmation of the necessity of tradition in conserving cultural order.

Donald Davidson, a major figure in the Agrarian Movement, summed up the intent of the work this way:

“The general theme that binds the essays—no matter what their specific subjects—is the conflict between tradition and anti-tradition that characterizes modern society, with tradition viewed as the living continuum that makes society and civilization possible and anti-tradition as the disintegrative principle that destroys society and civilization in the name of science and progress . . .

“The South, which has suffered most in its devoted defense of tradition, naturally offers me examples for consideration; but this is not a book about the South as such. It is as near as I can come, in essay form, to defining what I would conceive to be the true American position.”

In a brilliant and graceful style, Davidson pursues his theme in a rich variety of subjects: poetry, myth, and folklore; and in the complex rivalries between nation and region, the free citizen and the Leviathan state, the values of religion and the facts of science.

Order, sanity, and fullness of life are cornerstones of the tradition against which he appraises writers like Hardy and Hon Gould Fletcher, the historiography of Toynbee, and the social reporting of W.J. Case.

Praise for the Book

“Reading these essays, one is so impressed by their merit, their mastery of style and incisiveness of expression, that one feels this is Donald Davidson’s true account for which he is likely to be remembered.” —Louis D. Rubin, Jr.

“Mr. Davidson is the ablest exponent of the point of view of the intelligent Southern conservative. He has thoroughly thought-out philosophy of life and letters, and he never leaves you in any doubt as to where he stand on important issues. . . . The seventeen essays in Still Rebels, Still Yankees contain much that is instructive, provocative, wise, and beautifully written.” —South Atlantic Quarterly

“An excellent example of a type of book all too rare in this jet-propelled age: a collection of entertaining literary essays.” —Saturday Review

? Lewis P. Simpson (1916-2005) was Boyd Professor and William A. Read Professor of English, emeritus, at Louisiana State University. Among his many books are The Man of Letters in New England and the South; The Dispossessed Garden; The Brazen Face of History: Studies in the Literary Consciousness in America; Mind and the American Civil War: A Meditation on Lost Causes; and The Fable of the Southern Writer. He was a founding member of the Fellowship of Southern Writers, president of the Society for the Study of Southern Literature, and coeditor of the Southern Review from the inauguration of the New Series in 1965 until his retirement in 1987.

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