The fifth volume of The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture explores language and dialect in the South, including English and its numerous regional variants, Native American languages, and other non-English languages spoken over time by the region's immigrant communities. Among the more than sixty entries are eleven on indigenous languages and major essays on French, Spanish, and German. Each of these provides both historical and contemporary perspectives, identifying the language's location, number of speakers, vitality, and sample distinctive features. The book acknowledges the role of immigration in spreading features of Southern English to other regions and countries and in bringing linguistic influences from Europe and Africa to Southern English. The fascinating patchwork of English dialects is also fully presented, from African American English, Gullah, and Cajun English to the English spoken in Appalachia, the Ozarks, the Outer Banks, the Chesapeake Bay Islands, Charleston, and elsewhere. Topical entries discuss ongoing changes in the pronunciation, vocabulary, and grammar of English in the increasingly mobile South, as well as naming patterns, storytelling, preaching styles, and politeness, all of which deal with ways language is woven into southern culture.
Evangelical Protestant groups have dominated religious life in the South since the early nineteenth century. Even as the conservative Protestantism typically associated with the South has risen in social and...
The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture
This volume of The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture addresses the cultural, social, and intellectual terrain of myth, manners, and historical memory in the American South.
Foods like fried chicken and barbecue, once proudly provincial, found regional and national markets. ... The Taste of Country Cooking (1976) by Virginia's Edna Lewis and Bill Neal's Southern Cooking (1982) by North Carolina's Bill Neal.
Thus, the Gulf Coast Carnival season officially begins on 6 January, the Epiphany and Feast of Kings. On this date in New Orleans “King Cakes”—with a plastic miniature baby (representing the Baby Jesus) inside each and adorned in Mardi ...
Almost a decade in the making, this edition contains 24 individual volumes based on the thematic sections of the original Encyclopedia.
However, this concluding volume of The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture challenges previous understandings, revealing the region's rich, ever-expanding diversity and providing new explorations of race relations.
It includes solid, clear information in a single volume, offering with clarity and scholarship a breadth of topics unavailable anywhere else. This book also includes many surprises readers can only find by browsing.
Volume 2: Geography. This volume addresses general topics of cultural geographic interest, such as Appalachia, exiles and expatriates, Latino and Jewish populations, migration patterns, and the profound Disneyfication of central...
They lived in simple log cabins, which became another major symbol of southern culture. ... Native Americans met these colonists in stages of advancement onto the frontier: first the coastal tribes, then such stronger nomadic tribes as ...