Capturing the South Capturing the South

Capturing the South

Imagining America's Most Documented Region

    • $22.99
    • $22.99

Publisher Description

In his expansive history of documentary work in the South during the twentieth century, Scott L. Matthews examines the motivations and methodologies of several pivotal documentarians, including sociologist Howard Odum, photographers Jack Delano and Danny Lyon, and music ethnographer John Cohen. Their work salvaged and celebrated folk cultures threatened by modernization or strived to reveal and reform problems linked to the region's racial caste system and exploitative agricultural economy.

Images of alluring primitivism and troubling pathology often blurred together, neutralizing the aims of documentary work carried out in the name of reform during the Progressive era, New Deal, and civil rights movement. Black and white southerners in turn often resisted documentarians' attempts to turn their private lives into public symbols. The accumulation of these influential and, occasionally, controversial documentary images created an enduring, complex, and sometimes self-defeating mythology about the South that persists into the twenty-first century.

GENRE
History
RELEASED
2018
October 26
LANGUAGE
EN
English
LENGTH
328
Pages
PUBLISHER
The University of North Carolina Press
SELLER
Ingram DV LLC
SIZE
18.5
MB

More Books Like This

Hillbilly Hillbilly
2003
Writers of the Black Chicago Renaissance Writers of the Black Chicago Renaissance
2011
The Cambridge History of African American Literature The Cambridge History of African American Literature
2011
National Imaginaries, American Identities National Imaginaries, American Identities
2021
Specters of Democracy Specters of Democracy
2011
Real Folks Real Folks
2011