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The Southern Agrarians and the New Deal:
Essays after I'll Take My Stand

Edited by Emily S. Bingham and Thomas A. Underwood

336 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4

Cloth ISBN 0-8139-1995-9 • $49.50


Scholars frequently assume that the Southern Agrarian movement was limited to the philosophy laid out in the landmark 1930 book I'll Take My Stand. Yet that work consisted mainly of a philosophical critique of a nation that valued "progress" above spirituality.

Were it not for the Agrarians' angry reaction to criticism of their book—and for a dramatic transformation of the American political and economic landscape—Agrarianism would have died in 1930. But with the worsening of the Great Depression, and then Franklin D. Roosevelt's election and implementation of the New Deal, the Agrarians found their greatest opportunity to bring their ideas to the public. Encouraged by the prospect of transforming their abstraction of the South into a design for the social and economic revival of the nation, Donald Davidson, Andrew Nelson Lytle, Herman Clarence Nixon, Frank Lawrence Owsley, John Crowe Ransom, and Allen Tate wrote numerous essays countering the industrial north's place as moral exemplar; battling liberal policymakers who encouraged collective agriculture in the South; and denouncing social scientists who claimed to understand southern social relations.

Emily S. Bingham and Thomas A. Underwood's carefully selected collection of six key Agrarians' essays, combined with a revealing new introduction, offers a radically revised view of the movement as it was redefined and revived during the New Deal.



Reviews

"I heartily applaud Emily Bingham and Thomas Underwood for their astute selection of representative essays, careful editorial annotations, and thoughtful introduction. This collection almost certainly will spark new interest in the Agrarians. In addition, The Southern Agrarians and the New Deal is a valuable reminder of the headlong search for alternatives—cultural, social, political, and economic—that so marked the 1930s."

—W. Fitzhugh Brundage, editor of Where These Memories Grow: History, Memory, and Southern Identity

The Editors

Emily S. Bingham is an independent scholar living in Louisville, Kentucky. Thomas A. Underwood is the coeditor of Blacks at Harvard: A Documentary History of African-American Experience at Harvard and Radcliffe, and the author of Allen Tate: Orphan of the South.



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The Southern Agrarians and the New Deal: Essays after I'll Take My Stand
Edited by Emily S. Bingham and Thomas A. Underwood
336 pages, 6 1/8 x 9 1/4
Cloth ISBN 0-8139-2071-X • $49.50

http://www.upress.virginia.edu/books/bing&underwd.html

Revised 6/28/05