Southern Beauty: Race, Ritual, and Memory in the Modern South by Elizabeth Bronwyn Boyd (review)

Pub Date : 2024-07-16 DOI:10.1353/soh.2024.a932599
Misti Nicole Harper
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Paper, $30.95, ISBN 978-0-8203-6232-8; cloth, $120.95, ISBN 978-0-8203-6231-1.) <p>“What sort of trauma has their frivolity obscured?” (p. 146)—Elizabeth Bronwyn Boyd’s question drives her investigation of why the ideal of “the southern beauty figure” continues to endure into the twenty-first century after decades of radical social changes that destabilized white supremacy through the civil rights movement, feminism, and multiculturalism (p. xi). In <em>Southern Beauty: Race, Ritual, and Memory in the Modern South</em>, Boyd dismantles the figure of the southern belle turned southern lady. She traces the evolution of a potent symbol of an “imagined place and golden time when their [white people’s] interests were in favor and their privilege intact” (p. 33). The southern beauty is also wielded as an effective political weapon that suffocates further social progress by standing in for white southerners who relish reinforcing conservative, Eurocentric notions of femininity, heteronormativity, sexual <strong>[End Page 651]</strong> belonging, race, and class for the modern era. Boyd’s analysis of how the southern beauty and her political meaning remain relevant turns sorority rush, beauty pageants, and Old South spectacles into battlefields where white girls and women compete for physical and social validation, and where they defend the myths through which the southern beauty was first elevated.</p> <p>Boyd’s study shines like sequins on the gown of a Miss America contestant. Her first chapter, “Sister Act,” considers the rituals of exclusion during sorority rush at the University of Alabama and the University of Mississippi. In their bids for social relevance, coeds subject themselves to an intense scrutinization of their lineage and looks—all of which “reinscribe notions of race, region, and social place” (p. 5). Selecting new pledges hinges on a labyrinth of unspoken but understood rules of achievement and behavior that belie Greek organizations’ insistence that any young woman may join. Despite some notable attempts from white Greeks to dismantle discrimination, Boyd affirms that implicit tenets continue to prefer southern pledges (“Pity the poor Yankee”!), reject women whose personal styles do not conform to type, and defer to white patriarchy by favoring white candidates (p. 63). One member defended their racism by stating, “If we had a Black girl . . . none of the fraternities would want anything to do with us” (p. 56). With rare exception, Boyd notes, a culture of decorum polices middle- and upper-class white women who comply so that they may be assured of social connections, good marriages, and privileges for the rest of their lives. Most of these women are content to perpetuate harm for the prize of being regarded as a proper southern beauty.</p> <p>Similar politics dictate the world of southern pageants. These spectacles remain uniquely valued in a region where beauty is big business and where beauty winners can also earn social mobility. In her second chapter, “Miss Demeanor,” Boyd argues that the local and state pageant circuits that season hopefuls for the major contests, such as Miss America, pivot on adherence to an unapologetic Christianity, to unyielding traditional femininity, and to the feat of appearing humble in a hyperambitious space and are definitively white spaces where occasional Black or brown beauty queens are othered.</p> <p>Boyd’s crowning achievement, however, is her third chapter, “Hoop Dreams,” which investigates how the Natchez Garden Club of Natchez, Mississippi, and its supporters have propagated regional mythology and white supremacist history through its Confederate Pageant, which has run since 1931. In this section, Boyd illuminates two essential points—the lore of the southern beauty has extracted millions of tourist dollars and has also enabled white women to control historical memory, social norms, and political ideals. 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Abstract

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

Reviewed by:

  • Southern Beauty: Race, Ritual, and Memory in the Modern South by Elizabeth Bronwyn Boyd
  • Misti Nicole Harper
Southern Beauty: Race, Ritual, and Memory in the Modern South. By Elizabeth Bronwyn Boyd. (Athens: University of Georgia Press, 2022. Pp. xviii, 191. Paper, $30.95, ISBN 978-0-8203-6232-8; cloth, $120.95, ISBN 978-0-8203-6231-1.)

“What sort of trauma has their frivolity obscured?” (p. 146)—Elizabeth Bronwyn Boyd’s question drives her investigation of why the ideal of “the southern beauty figure” continues to endure into the twenty-first century after decades of radical social changes that destabilized white supremacy through the civil rights movement, feminism, and multiculturalism (p. xi). In Southern Beauty: Race, Ritual, and Memory in the Modern South, Boyd dismantles the figure of the southern belle turned southern lady. She traces the evolution of a potent symbol of an “imagined place and golden time when their [white people’s] interests were in favor and their privilege intact” (p. 33). The southern beauty is also wielded as an effective political weapon that suffocates further social progress by standing in for white southerners who relish reinforcing conservative, Eurocentric notions of femininity, heteronormativity, sexual [End Page 651] belonging, race, and class for the modern era. Boyd’s analysis of how the southern beauty and her political meaning remain relevant turns sorority rush, beauty pageants, and Old South spectacles into battlefields where white girls and women compete for physical and social validation, and where they defend the myths through which the southern beauty was first elevated.

Boyd’s study shines like sequins on the gown of a Miss America contestant. Her first chapter, “Sister Act,” considers the rituals of exclusion during sorority rush at the University of Alabama and the University of Mississippi. In their bids for social relevance, coeds subject themselves to an intense scrutinization of their lineage and looks—all of which “reinscribe notions of race, region, and social place” (p. 5). Selecting new pledges hinges on a labyrinth of unspoken but understood rules of achievement and behavior that belie Greek organizations’ insistence that any young woman may join. Despite some notable attempts from white Greeks to dismantle discrimination, Boyd affirms that implicit tenets continue to prefer southern pledges (“Pity the poor Yankee”!), reject women whose personal styles do not conform to type, and defer to white patriarchy by favoring white candidates (p. 63). One member defended their racism by stating, “If we had a Black girl . . . none of the fraternities would want anything to do with us” (p. 56). With rare exception, Boyd notes, a culture of decorum polices middle- and upper-class white women who comply so that they may be assured of social connections, good marriages, and privileges for the rest of their lives. Most of these women are content to perpetuate harm for the prize of being regarded as a proper southern beauty.

Similar politics dictate the world of southern pageants. These spectacles remain uniquely valued in a region where beauty is big business and where beauty winners can also earn social mobility. In her second chapter, “Miss Demeanor,” Boyd argues that the local and state pageant circuits that season hopefuls for the major contests, such as Miss America, pivot on adherence to an unapologetic Christianity, to unyielding traditional femininity, and to the feat of appearing humble in a hyperambitious space and are definitively white spaces where occasional Black or brown beauty queens are othered.

Boyd’s crowning achievement, however, is her third chapter, “Hoop Dreams,” which investigates how the Natchez Garden Club of Natchez, Mississippi, and its supporters have propagated regional mythology and white supremacist history through its Confederate Pageant, which has run since 1931. In this section, Boyd illuminates two essential points—the lore of the southern beauty has extracted millions of tourist dollars and has also enabled white women to control historical memory, social norms, and political ideals. Boyd thoughtfully explores how white southern women shrewdly use the white-constructed image of a southern lady as a foil to control the modern South.

Misti Nicole Harper University of North Carolina at Pembroke Copyright © 2024 The Southern Historical Association ...

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南方之美:伊丽莎白-布朗温-博伊德(Elizabeth Bronwyn Boyd)所著的《现代南方的种族、仪式和记忆》(评论
以下是内容的简要摘录,以代替摘要:评论者: 南方之美:Elizabeth Bronwyn Boyd Misti Nicole Harper 著,《南方之美:现代南方的种族、仪式与记忆》(Southern Beauty: Race, Ritual, and Memory in the Modern South):现代南方的种族、仪式与记忆》。作者:伊丽莎白-布朗温-博伊德。(雅典:乔治亚大学出版社,2022 年。第 xviii 页,第 191 页。纸质版,30.95 美元,ISBN 978-0-8203-6232-8;布质版,120.95 美元,ISBN 978-0-8203-6231-1)。"他们的轻浮掩盖了怎样的创伤?(第 146 页)--伊丽莎白-布朗温-博伊德(Elizabeth Bronwyn Boyd)的这一问题推动了她对 "南方美人形象 "这一理想为何在经历了数十年激进的社会变革(民权运动、女权主义和多元文化主义颠覆了白人至上主义)之后仍能延续到 21 世纪的研究(第 xi 页)。在《南方之美》一书中:在《南方美人:现代南方的种族、仪式和记忆》一书中,博伊德拆解了由南方美女变成南方淑女的形象。她追溯了 "想象中的地方和黄金时代 "这一有力象征的演变过程,"那时他们(白人)的利益得到了保障,他们的特权完好无损"(第 33 页)。南方美人还被用作一种有效的政治武器,通过为南方白人代言,窒息社会的进一步进步,而南方白人则乐于为现代人强化保守的、欧洲中心主义的女性、异性恋、性 [完 第 651 页] 归属、种族和阶级观念。博伊德分析了南方美人及其政治意义如何保持其相关性,她将联谊会选美、选美和南方旧景变成了白人女孩和妇女争夺身体和社会认可的战场,她们在这里捍卫着南方美人最初得以升华的神话。博伊德的研究就像美国小姐选手礼服上的亮片一样闪闪发光。她的第一章 "姊妹行动 "探讨了阿拉巴马大学和密西西比大学联谊会的排挤仪式。在争取社会地位的过程中,联谊会成员的血统和长相受到严格审查,所有这些都 "重塑了种族、地区和社会地位的概念"(第 5 页)。挑选新的入会誓言取决于一系列潜移默化但又为人所理解的成绩和行为规则,这与希腊组织坚持任何年轻女性都可以加入的理念背道而驰。尽管希腊白人为消除歧视做出了一些显著的尝试,但博伊德确认,隐含的信条仍然偏爱南方的誓约者("可怜的北方佬"!),拒绝个人风格与类型不符的女性,并通过偏爱白人候选人来服从白人父权制(第 63 页)。一位成员为他们的种族主义辩护说:"如果我们有一个黑人女孩......没有一个兄弟会愿意和我们有任何关系"(第 56 页)。博伊德指出,除了极少数例外,礼仪文化对中产阶级和上层阶级的白人女性有严格的规定,她们必须遵守这些规定,这样才能保证她们的社会关系、美好的婚姻以及终生享有的特权。这些女性中的大多数人都满足于延续伤害,以换取被视为正统南方美人的奖赏。类似的政治决定了南方选美世界。在这个地区,选美是一门大生意,选美获胜者还能赢得社会流动性,因此这些选美活动仍受到独特的重视。在第二章 "举止小姐 "中,博伊德认为,地方和州选美比赛是美国小姐等大型比赛的候选者的选拔赛,其关键在于坚持毫不掩饰的基督教信仰、不屈不挠的传统女性气质,以及在极度膨胀的空间中表现出谦逊的壮举,这些都是明确的白人空间,偶尔出现的黑人或棕色人种的选美皇后在这里都是另类。然而,博伊德的最高成就是她的第三章 "Hoop Dreams",该章调查了密西西比州纳奇兹的纳奇兹花园俱乐部及其支持者如何通过其自 1931 年开始举办的邦联选美会宣传地区神话和白人至上主义历史。在本节中,博伊德阐明了两个基本要点--南方美人的传说攫取了数百万美元的旅游收入,同时也使白人妇女得以控制历史记忆、社会规范和政治理想。博伊德深思熟虑地探讨了白人南方妇女如何精明地利用白人建构的南方淑女形象来控制现代南方。米斯蒂-尼科尔-哈珀 北卡罗来纳大学彭布罗克分校 版权所有 © 2024 美国南方历史协会 ...
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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