My Tears Spoiled My Aim: And Other Reflections on Southern Culture

Author:   John Shelton Reed
Publisher:   University of Missouri Press
ISBN:  

9780826208866


Pages:   168
Publication Date:   01 March 1993
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained


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My Tears Spoiled My Aim: And Other Reflections on Southern Culture


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Full Product Details

Author:   John Shelton Reed
Publisher:   University of Missouri Press
Imprint:   University of Missouri Press
Dimensions:   Width: 16.50cm , Height: 2.00cm , Length: 24.10cm
Weight:   0.476kg
ISBN:  

9780826208866


ISBN 10:   082620886
Pages:   168
Publication Date:   01 March 1993
Audience:   General/trade ,  College/higher education ,  General ,  Undergraduate
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Out of Print
Availability:   Out of stock   Availability explained

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Reviews

<p>&quot;[Reed] approaches his work with nothing short of pure delight, mixing insight and analysis with wit and levity.&quot;--News &amp; Record


""[Reed] approaches his work with nothing short of pure delight, mixing insight and analysis with wit and levity.""--News & Record ""Wonderfully authentic: an admirably lighthearted supplement to W. J. Cash's classic The Mind of the South.""--Kirkus Reviews


Where exactly is the South? Why do southerners so love it? Why have more and more blacks been moving there? Is the southerner's reputation for laziness really deserved? Those who know Reed (Sociology/University of North Carolina) only as the author of Southern Folk; Plain & Fancy (1986) - a vastly entertaining collection of southern stereotypes - will be gratifyingly surprised with the present essays, which effortlessly cut through a century's worth of bias to answer the above questions and more. Reed insists that to ask Where is the South? is pointless. Southerners, he contends, are America's only genuine ethnic group and are bound together by culture - patterns of diet, religion, music, manners, and the like - rather than by geography. There are sizable southern enclaves in Ypsilanti, Michigan; in Bakersfield, California; in Brooklyn; and in many other places. Asked what they like about the South, southerners who live below the Mason-Dixon Line invariably speak of the pleasant natural conditions and the amiable people: It's green, clean-looking, not eaten-up with pollution ; I have a great feeling of being respected and welcomed here. What about returning blacks? Reed says that the years 1963-65 evidenced a watershed reversal of white prejudice; that more blacks now hold public office in the South than any other region ; and that average black incomes in the South have exceeded those in the Midwest, and increased in the 1980's while declining elsewhere in the US. And as for southerners' supposed laziness, Reed notes that they watch less TV and listen to less radio than their compatriots. The author also quotes a 1973 Harris poll that found favorite pastimes to include fixing things around the house; helping others; eating; developing one's personality; having a good time with friends and family; taking naps; and just doing nothing. Wonderfully authentic: an admirably lighthearted supplement to W.J. Cash's classic The Mind of the South. (Kirkus Reviews)


Wonderfully authentic: an admirably lighthearted supplement to W. J. Cash's classic The Mind of the South. --Kirkus Reviews


Author Information

John Shelton Reed taught for thirty-one years at the University of North Carolina, where he directed the Howard Odum Institute for Research in Social Science and helped to found the university's Center for the Study of the American South. A founding coeditor of the quarterly Southern Cultures, he has received many fellowships and prizes and has been president of the Southern Sociological Society and the Southern Association for Public Opinion Research. He was once a judge at the Memphis in May World Championship Barbecue Cooking Contest, and in 2001 he was elected to the Fellowship of Southern Writers. Reed has written many books including Kicking Back and Surveying the South (both with University of Missouri Press). He lives and writes in Chapel Hill, North Carolina.

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