The Southern Way of Life: Meanings of Culture and Civilization in the American South by Charles Reagan Wilson (review)

IF 0.8 2区 历史学 Q1 HISTORY JOURNAL OF SOUTHERN HISTORY Pub Date : 2024-04-22 DOI:10.1353/soh.2024.a925456
Douglas E. Thompson
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Mathews, and John Lee Eighmy define religion in denominational terms. They have been narrators of the Protestant Baptist, Methodist, and Presbyterian histories of the region. In contrast, Wilson’s civil religion thesis in <em>Baptized in Blood: The Religion of the Lost Cause, 1865–1920</em> (Athens, Ga., 1980) outlines a way to understand the cultural affinity for Lost Cause mythology within white southern identity beyond denominational loyalties. He has helped explain how white southern Protestants’ identity in white supremacy was a feature of public religion in the region. Though conceived to explain the Lost Cause as civil religion, Wilson’s body of work today can be understood as a way to think about the role of religion in the making of the state, or at least in the failure of the Confederacy. Additionally, for almost five decades, Wilson served at the University of Mississippi, first as an editor for the <em>Encyclopedia of Southern Culture</em> and then as director of the Center for the Study of Southern Culture. The “Author’s Note” at the end of his newest book, <em>The Southern Way of Life: Meanings of Culture and Civilization in the American South</em>, captures the scope of his engagement with the people and places that have shaped the field as we know it today.</p> <p>The book’s nine chapters divide into three parts, forming a structure that also serves as Wilson’s understanding of the “field of conceptual history” (p. 4). This “interdisciplinary” approach to the region “considers the evolution of ideas and value systems and how they seem to become commonsensical, natural, and normal over long time periods” (p. 4). The “ideas” examined are notions of “‘southern civilization,’ ‘the southern way of life,’ and ‘southern living’” (p. 4). While the terms may fit neatly into notions of moonlight-and-magnolias storytelling, Wilson shows how the words and the concepts behind those words shifted under changing circumstances, often in conversation with the region’s nonwhite residents. As he has done for much of his career, Wilson explores “the many Souths” as a form of content—from Thomas Jefferson to OutKast—and he uses all academic disciplines that can help us make sense of the region trying to make sense of itself (p. 475). <strong>[End Page 418]</strong></p> <p>In each section, Wilson unpacks his conceptual framework through disciplines beyond history. His source material engages sociologists’ and anthropologists’ ways of thinking as frequently, if not more so, than historians’. But the linear chronology underscores the historian’s craft. He is telling the story of the region, from its planter roots, to explain its conservative nature through the significant changes the American South has seen in the past seventy years.</p> <p>The first section of the book understands the region as a social construction of a vision of southern civilization. Beginning with a colonial origin story, moving forward into the Reconstruction era, and ending in the early twentieth century, Part 1, “Southern Civilization,” makes good use of source material. White men in the region came to believe that their version of culture would protect and project notions of civilization, which they deemed ancient, and they believed that their contributions were a through line to civilization’s ongoing development. These men were so committed to their vision of a nation that they were willing to destroy the one they were part of to build a new nation in their image. 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Abstract

In lieu of an abstract, here is a brief excerpt of the content:

Reviewed by:

  • The Southern Way of Life: Meanings of Culture and Civilization in the American South by Charles Reagan Wilson
  • Douglas E. Thompson
The Southern Way of Life: Meanings of Culture and Civilization in the American South. By Charles Reagan Wilson. (Chapel Hill: University of North Carolina Press, 2022. Pp. [xvi], 598. $39.95, ISBN 978-1-4696-6498-9.)

It would be hard to imagine the field of southern studies without Charles Reagan Wilson. He has reshaped how we study religion in the American South. Scholars like Samuel S. Hill, Donald G. Mathews, and John Lee Eighmy define religion in denominational terms. They have been narrators of the Protestant Baptist, Methodist, and Presbyterian histories of the region. In contrast, Wilson’s civil religion thesis in Baptized in Blood: The Religion of the Lost Cause, 1865–1920 (Athens, Ga., 1980) outlines a way to understand the cultural affinity for Lost Cause mythology within white southern identity beyond denominational loyalties. He has helped explain how white southern Protestants’ identity in white supremacy was a feature of public religion in the region. Though conceived to explain the Lost Cause as civil religion, Wilson’s body of work today can be understood as a way to think about the role of religion in the making of the state, or at least in the failure of the Confederacy. Additionally, for almost five decades, Wilson served at the University of Mississippi, first as an editor for the Encyclopedia of Southern Culture and then as director of the Center for the Study of Southern Culture. The “Author’s Note” at the end of his newest book, The Southern Way of Life: Meanings of Culture and Civilization in the American South, captures the scope of his engagement with the people and places that have shaped the field as we know it today.

The book’s nine chapters divide into three parts, forming a structure that also serves as Wilson’s understanding of the “field of conceptual history” (p. 4). This “interdisciplinary” approach to the region “considers the evolution of ideas and value systems and how they seem to become commonsensical, natural, and normal over long time periods” (p. 4). The “ideas” examined are notions of “‘southern civilization,’ ‘the southern way of life,’ and ‘southern living’” (p. 4). While the terms may fit neatly into notions of moonlight-and-magnolias storytelling, Wilson shows how the words and the concepts behind those words shifted under changing circumstances, often in conversation with the region’s nonwhite residents. As he has done for much of his career, Wilson explores “the many Souths” as a form of content—from Thomas Jefferson to OutKast—and he uses all academic disciplines that can help us make sense of the region trying to make sense of itself (p. 475). [End Page 418]

In each section, Wilson unpacks his conceptual framework through disciplines beyond history. His source material engages sociologists’ and anthropologists’ ways of thinking as frequently, if not more so, than historians’. But the linear chronology underscores the historian’s craft. He is telling the story of the region, from its planter roots, to explain its conservative nature through the significant changes the American South has seen in the past seventy years.

The first section of the book understands the region as a social construction of a vision of southern civilization. Beginning with a colonial origin story, moving forward into the Reconstruction era, and ending in the early twentieth century, Part 1, “Southern Civilization,” makes good use of source material. White men in the region came to believe that their version of culture would protect and project notions of civilization, which they deemed ancient, and they believed that their contributions were a through line to civilization’s ongoing development. These men were so committed to their vision of a nation that they were willing to destroy the one they were part of to build a new nation in their image. Even in the ashes of the Confederacy, the leaders of the region reimagined the renewing of civilization in the light of the Lost Cause myth. While Wilson gives an accounting for Black and Native voices in the first chapter, he shows how those persons reshaped...

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南方的生活方式:查尔斯-里根-威尔逊(Charles Reagan Wilson)所著的《美国南方文化与文明的含义》(评论
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 南方的生活方式:查尔斯-里根-威尔逊 Douglas E. Thompson 著 The Southern Way of Life:美国南方文化与文明的意义》。作者:查尔斯-里根-威尔逊。(教堂山:北卡罗来纳大学出版社,2022 年。Pp.[xvi], 598.39.95美元,ISBN 978-1-4696-6498-9)。如果没有查尔斯-里根-威尔逊(Charles Reagan Wilson),我们很难想象南方研究领域会是什么样子。他重塑了我们研究美国南方宗教的方式。塞缪尔-希尔(Samuel S. Hill)、唐纳德-马修斯(Donald G. Mathews)和约翰-李-艾格米(John Lee Eighmy)等学者从教派的角度定义宗教。他们是该地区新教浸礼会、卫理公会和长老会历史的叙述者。相比之下,威尔逊在《血的洗礼》(Baptized in Blood:The Religion of the Lost Cause, 1865-1920》(Athens, Ga., 1980 年)一书中,威尔逊提出了一种方法,来理解南方白人身份认同中超越教派忠诚的 "失落的事业 "神话的文化亲和力。他帮助解释了南方白人新教徒对白人至上主义的认同是该地区公共宗教的一个特征。虽然威尔逊的构想是将 "失落的事业 "解释为公民宗教,但他今天的作品可以被理解为一种思考宗教在国家建立过程中所扮演角色的方式,或者至少是在南方邦联失败过程中所扮演角色的方式。此外,威尔逊在密西西比大学工作了近五十年,先是担任《南方文化百科全书》的编辑,后又担任南方文化研究中心主任。威尔逊的最新著作《南方生活方式》(The Southern Way of Life)末尾的 "作者说明":美国南方文化与文明的意义》一书末尾的 "作者说明 "概括了他与塑造了我们今天所知的这一领域的人和地方的交往范围。全书九章分为三个部分,形成了一个结构,这也是威尔逊对 "概念史领域 "的理解(第 4 页)。这种 "跨学科 "的研究方法 "考虑了思想和价值体系的演变,以及它们是如何在漫长的岁月中变得通俗、自然和正常的"(第 4 页)。所研究的 "观念 "包括"'南方文明'、'南方生活方式'和'南方生活'"等概念(第 4 页)。虽然这些术语可能与 "月光与巨石阵 "故事的概念完全吻合,但威尔逊展示了这些词语和词语背后的概念是如何在不断变化的环境中发生转变的,这些转变往往是在与该地区非白人居民的对话中发生的。正如威尔逊在其职业生涯的大部分时间里所做的那样,他将 "众多南方 "作为一种内容形式进行探索--从托马斯-杰斐逊到奥特-卡斯特--他运用了所有可以帮助我们理解该地区试图理解自身的学科(第 475 页)。[在每一节中,威尔逊都通过历史以外的学科来解读他的概念框架。他的原始资料与社会学家和人类学家的思维方式一样,甚至比历史学家的思维方式更加频繁。但线性编年史强调了历史学家的技艺。他讲述的是该地区的故事,从种植园主的根源出发,通过美国南方在过去七十年中发生的重大变化来解释其保守的本质。本书第一部分将该地区理解为南方文明愿景的社会建构。第一部分 "南方文明 "从殖民时期的起源故事开始,向前推进到重建时期,最后结束于二十世纪初,很好地利用了原始资料。该地区的白人逐渐相信,他们的文化版本将保护和弘扬他们认为古老的文明观念,他们相信自己的贡献是文明持续发展的必经之路。这些人如此执着于自己的国家愿景,以至于他们不惜摧毁自己所属的国家,也要按照自己的形象建立一个新的国家。即使是在南方联盟的废墟中,该地区的领导人也在 "失去的事业 "神话的照耀下重新构想文明的复兴。威尔逊在第一章对黑人和原住民的声音进行了阐述,并展示了这些人是如何重塑......
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