In this Book

Discovering the South: One Man's Travels through a Changing America in the 1930s

Book
Jennifer Ritterhouse
2017
buy this book Buy This Book in Print
summary
During the Great Depression, the American South was not merely “the nation’s number one economic problem,” as President Franklin Roosevelt declared. It was also a battlefield on which forces for and against social change were starting to form. For a white southern liberal like Jonathan Daniels, editor of the Raleigh News and Observer, it was a fascinating moment to explore. Attuned to culture as well as politics, Daniels knew the true South lay somewhere between Erskine Caldwell’s Tobacco Road and Margaret Mitchell’s Gone with the Wind. On May 5, 1937, he set out to find it, driving thousands of miles in his trusty Plymouth and ultimately interviewing even Mitchell herself.

In Discovering the South historian Jennifer Ritterhouse pieces together Daniels’s unpublished notes from his tour along with his published writings and a wealth of archival evidence to put this one man’s journey through a South in transition into a larger context. Daniels’s well chosen itinerary brought him face to face with the full range of political and cultural possibilities in the South of the 1930s, from New Deal liberalism and social planning in the Tennessee Valley Authority, to Communist agitation in the Scottsboro case, to planters' and industrialists' reactionary worldview and repressive violence. The result is a lively narrative of black and white southerners fighting for and against democratic social change at the start of the nation’s long civil rights era.

For more information on this book, see www.discoveringthesouth.org.

Table of Contents

Cover

Title Page, Copyright Page, Dedication

pp. i-viii

Contents

pp. ix-xii

Acknowledgments

pp. xiii-xviii

Introduction: The Same Journey, Writ Small, That the United States Was On

pp. 1-19

Chapter One: We So-Called Free Moderns

pp. 20-49

Chapter Two: This Division between Faith in Democracy and Power Descending from Authority

pp. 50-70

Chapter Three: The Demand for Justice Will Not Be a Cause Furthered Only by Radicals

pp. 71-99

Chapter Four: A Quaint and Quixotic Group of Gentlemen

pp. 100-127

Chapter Five: Tenants Are Able to Hold Their Heads a Little Higher

pp. 128-159

Chapter Six: Naked and Hot as If She Were Stripped in the Sun

pp. 160-174

Chapter Seven: The Most Interesting Man I Met

pp. 175-202

Chapter Eight: As Furious as the Last Horseman of a Legion of the Bitter-End

pp. 203-221

Chapter Nine: A Red-Headed Woman Immaculate and Immediate from the Beauty Parlor

pp. 222-240

Chapter Ten: The Newly Exciting Question of the Possibility of Democracy

pp. 241-269

Conclusion: Only All Together Shall Any of Us Overcome

pp. 270-294

Notes

pp. 295-332

Bibliography

pp. 333-350

Index

pp. 351-363
Back To Top