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Paperback Dixie Rising Pa Book

ISBN: 0156005506

ISBN13: 9780156005500

Dixie Rising Pa

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Format: Paperback

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Book Overview

In "one of the best portrayals of the South in years" (Washington Post), the Atlanta bureau chief of the New York Times travels from catfish farms and neo-Confederate gatherings to casinos and country music festivals and examines the reasons behind the region's growing influence. Index.

Customer Reviews

4 ratings

A must-read for all thinking of moving South

Born and raised in New Orleans, I moved North to pursue my career. The culture up here wasn't what I expected, having been indoctrinated that the South had exclusive rights on racism and xenophobia. But the North is clearly different than the South, especially the Deep South, and I've always had difficulty describing to Yankees just what those differences were and why they were so crucial to understand how Southerners think and why they do what they do. As an example, folks up here often wonder why the South seems so preoccupied with the Civil War; in many Southern hearts, the Civil Rights Movement of the early '60s was a continuation of that war of a century earlier, though in mind they deny such, even to themselves.While reading this book, I was often startled to see some small observation so well describe my memories growing to a young adult there. In my opinion, Applebome has an excellent eye and is brilliant in his ability to not only discern but describe the little things that make the South what it is. He is able to spotlight what makes so much of its culture attractive to so many Americans, while turning over the rocks to show what lies beneath.I left the South for reasons besides my career. For whatever cause, I often felt out of step with the prevailing culture. Perhaps I was born a "bleeding-heart Liberal", I've been called a "*** Lover", but for sure my views differed from many of those in my circle of family and friends. So perhaps my opinion of this book is tainted by a Yankee's disdain for the South, though where this Southern Boy got it is unclear.Applebome seems less to judge than to describe, though some may take issue with his giving voice to certain issues; it's a Southern Tradition that "some things are best not spoken of". Those who dismiss this book as trite or superficial must, I suspect, never have lived in the South. Or they feel obliged to defend it's honor.I've not recommended, but URGED, the reading of this book to all whom I've met who express an interest in leaving the North to live and work down South. Taking this book to heart, not as a condemnation or criticism, but as a roadmap and perhaps "cultural guidebook", will make their transition far easier with fewer long-remembered missteps.If you've ever looked at Southern politics or politicians, or anything Southern, and wondered "What the Hell were they THINKING when they did that?", this is the book for you. And if you've heard such a thought expressed, and smiled quietly because it was obvious but hard to explain, this book will take you back home. -gus

The triumph of Dixie!

Being a Republican from the North, I soon became fascinated with the South, and how its sudden shift to the right came to be. This book answered all of my questions. From Newt Gingrich (who Mr. Applebome apparently dislikes), to the late George Wallace, and to the Civil Rights era and Brown v. The Board of Education. This book covers it all! In the beginning, Applebome admits to voting Democratic and that point of view is present throughout the novel. (You can almost smell his resentment toward Fmr. Speaker Newt Gingrich.) The man (Applebome) does indeed have great political intelligence. In the Afterword, Applebome predicts who the 2000 Republican Presidential candidate will be and one of the names mentioned is Gov. George W. Bush. The rivalry between Atlanta and Charlotte, the Casinos in the Mississippi Delta, to the effects of integration, this book captures your full attention and leaves you to wonder where the South is headed next!

Southern Culture, American Culture

Through a dozen chapters, Peter Applebome journeys through the modern South, discussing how Southern values have become American values, and how Southern culture has become mainstream. Since the 1960s, the South's politics have come to dominate the nation, and themes that are prominent in the South's daily life have come to be accepted across the country. These themse include individualism, race as a subtext to daily life, religion as part of political life, opposition to gun control, support for the death penalty, liberalism as a dirty word, and states rights as a viable political theory. All of these describe the South, and in the 1990s, they describe the country as well. The region's influence has grown along with its population Applebome looks at all parts of the South, including suburban Cobb County, which he says has defined itself in opposition to Atlanta. Cobb's suburban strip malls are no different than those in any suburban setting in the country. Southern cities like Atlanta and Charlotte are among the nation's business centers. Applebome looks at other parts of the South, examining the state of race relations, the ghosts of labor uprisings, the plight of the rural South, and Southerners' nostalgia for a place that never existed. All in all, Applebome paints an accurate picture of the Modern South, and is generally successful as a journalist in showing that the modern South's contributions to the nation have been both positive and negative. The region has influenced the nation's politics and culture for good and for ill.

Pointed look at the culture and politics of the New South.

Recently I reread Dixie Rising and was amazed at how clearly the author pointed out many of the political trends we are seeing now, especially how and why all the Southern Democrats became "Conservative Republicans" and what led to the rise of the politics we are seeing now. An excellent book and in many ways more relevant now than when it was published
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