dixie risen? a look back at the south in the modern american mind

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Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

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Page 1: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Dixie Risen?

A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Page 3: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Moving from North Carolina to Kansas revealed my unexplored Southerness

This was not good. Midwesterners had negative feelings about the South, but they liked to hear me say “y’all”

LSU seemed to be the place to explore this, way behind the Magnolia Curtain

Pete Shortridge had conducted a national survey about the Mid-West, I aped that survey with one about the Deep South at LSU

Peter Applebome’s 1996 book, Dixie Rising…spurred the survey and subsequent number crunching at UNCW

Page 4: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 5: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

A nation-wide captive audience of freshmen Geography students were shamelessly used

John Shelton Reed, Professor of Sociology at UNC, inveterate South watcher, egged me on

Fred Kniffen, Cultural Geography at LSU, ditto

Colleagues, friends or professors in 37 states who had never heard of me, graciously took class time from their students to answer the survey questions and draw the Deep South on a map

Page 6: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 7: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 8: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Aided and abetted by Harry Smith, UNCW Mathematics, who wrote code so I could analyze the graphic part of the survey, I scanned a sample of the thousands received

Page 9: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 10: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

The idea was to make sample composites of the perceived location of the Deep South from other regions

The intriguing thing about Pete’s work was that the Midwest moved, depending on who drew it.

The location of the Deep South was not as hard to pin down as the Midwest had been for Pete, although some students included Southern California and Arizona!

Page 11: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Two of Pete’s maps

Page 12: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Nearly universal confusion reigned between the South and the Deep South

The South is Dixie

The Deep South IS the domain of kudzu, cotton, Bubbas, Baptists, and bugs, and is a sub-region of Dixie

The survey respondents perceived the South and the Deep South (basically undifferentiated) as the domain of racists, heat and humidity, obesity, incest, willful ignorance, the radical right, and bugs

Page 13: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 14: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

South

Deep South

Page 15: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Dixie, Wiki

Page 16: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 17: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 18: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 19: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 20: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 21: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Not the best idea I ever had

My image of the South had been mostly positive before moving to Kansas

(Glib photo montage)

Page 22: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Friendliness

Page 23: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 24: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Fashion

Page 25: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 26: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Food

Page 27: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 28: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 29: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

World’s largest frying pan, Rose Hill, NC

Page 30: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Fishing

Page 31: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Agriculture

Page 32: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Religion

Page 33: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 34: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Lost Cause

Page 35: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 36: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Music

Page 37: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Wilber Zelinsky, John Shelton Reed, and other South watchers had explored the South using digital phone books.

I aped that too

Page 38: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 39: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 40: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 41: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

There’s a lot of Dixie and a lot of Bubba in Texas, but is it the Deep South?

Page 42: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 43: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Back to the survey

The responses were put into categories:

Nationally, the survey showed…

Page 44: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 45: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Alarmingly, many of the respondents listed negative characteristics

The number one Deep Southern negative characteristic was racism

Page 46: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

1940s, Tarboro, NC

Page 47: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

1950s

Page 48: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

1990s, Knoxville, TN

Page 49: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

1991, Charleston, SC

Page 50: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

1993, Greensboro, NC

Page 51: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

1993, Wilmington, NC

Page 52: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

1993, Wilmington, NC

Page 53: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 54: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Back to the survey

Although, heat, humidity, bugs appeared nearly as often.

I toyed with names for the article from the responses:

Page 55: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Bubba, Baptists, Bugs, and Bass

Rednecks, White Trash, and Blue Laws

Gump, Grits, and Guns

Hogs, Humidity, Hospitality, and Jesse Helms

There were also a lot of references to ignorance and in-breeding

Page 56: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Poverty, obesity, mosquitoes, cock roaches, pot holes, road kill, okra, and chitlins were also mentioned.

Very few remarked on Applebome’s notion that the South was leading the nation politically, spiritually or economically.

Page 57: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

A sample of comments:

The South is backwards, a lot of crazy Republicans and very religious people.

It’s hot and the people are very slow,

physically and mentally.

Not much high culture or value of education.

Page 58: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Narrow mindedness and refusal to accept change.

All that kindness of strangers crap, lots of rebellious bastards still resentful that they lost the Civil War.

Deliverance: My conceptions of the South come mostly from the media. There’s no way in hell I would ever go there.

Page 60: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 61: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Finally, from Montana:

I lived in Tennessee and Kentucky, so I know. But when the South is brought up, most people think it’s full of rednecks and racists. One asked me if we had cars there, assuming that I rode a horse or tractor to school. They also think people date their relatives. My personal thought is that it’s very scenic and beautiful.

Page 62: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

Results and Conclusion:Nothing conclusive

However, perceptions of the South, Deep or extended, are strong. Positive within the region, and usually negative from outside.

And, the South is most interesting to Southerners.

We’re fascinated with us!

Page 63: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind

I forgot to mention Yankees!

Page 64: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind
Page 65: Dixie Risen? A Look Back at the South in the Modern American Mind