The South and America since World War II

The South and America since World War II

by James C. Cobb
ISBN-10:
0195166515
ISBN-13:
9780195166514
Pub. Date:
10/21/2011
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0195166515
ISBN-13:
9780195166514
Pub. Date:
10/21/2011
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
The South and America since World War II

The South and America since World War II

by James C. Cobb

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Overview

In this superb volume, James C. Cobb provides the first truly comprehensive history of the South since World War II, brilliantly capturing an era of dramatic change, both in the South and in its relationship with the rest of the nation.
Here is a panoramic narrative that flows seamlessly from the Dixiecrats to the "southern strategy," to the South's domination of today's GOP, and from the national ascendance of southern culture and music, to a globalized Dixie's allure for foreign factories and a flood of immigrants, to the roles of women and an increasingly visible gay population in contemporary southern life. The heart of the book illuminates the struggle for Civil Rights. Jim Crow still towered over the South in 1945, but Cobb shows that Pearl Harbor unloosed forces that would bring its ultimate demise. Growing black political clout outside the South and the contradiction of fighting racist totalitarianism abroad while tolerating it at home set the stage for returning black veterans to spearhead the NAACP's postwar assault on the South's racial system. This assault sparked not only vocal white resistance but mounting violence that culminated in the murder of young Emmett Till in 1955. Energized rather than intimidated, however, blacks in Montgomery staged the famous bus boycott, bringing the Rev. Martin Luther King to the fore and paving the way for the dramatic protests and confrontations that finally brought profound racial changes as well as two-party politics to the South.
As he did in the prize-winning The Most Southern Place on Earth and Away Down South, Cobb writes with wit and grace, showing a thorough grasp of his native region. Exhaustively researched and brimming with original insights, The South and America Since World War II is indeed the definitive history of the postwar South and its changing role in national life.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780195166514
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 10/21/2011
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 392
Product dimensions: 5.50(w) x 8.20(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

James C. Cobb is B. Phinizy Spalding Distinguished Professor at the University of Georgia. His books include The Most Southern Place on Earth, which won the Mississippi Historical Society's McLemore Prize, and Away Down South, which received the Mary Lawton Hodges Prize in Southern Studies.

Table of Contents

Preface and Acknowledgments
Introduction
CHAPTER 1 - The Post-War Assault on Jim Crow
CHAPTER 2 - Massive Resistance and the Civil Rights Awakening
CHAPTER 3 - From Farm to Factory and Town to City
CHAPTER 4 - How the Civil Rights Movement "Overcame"
CHAPTER 5 - The Politics of "Backlash," North and South
CHAPTER 6 - The South Rejoins the Union, and Vice-Versa
CHAPTER 7 - Poverty, Power, and the Rise of the "Southern Rim"
CHAPTER 8 - The Price of "Progress" in the Sunbelt South
CHAPTER 9 - Women, Work, Politics, and the Problem of Change
CHAPTER 10 - Whites, Blacks, and Southern Identity after Jim Crow
CHAPTER 11 - Division and Diversity in the Contemporary South
CHAPTER 12 - Why the South is Still America's "Other"
NOTES
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