Popular Culture


 

A Question of Class
The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction
Duane Carr

Popular Press

"Rednecks" have long been subjects of scorn and ridicule, especially in the South. Carr probes the historical and sociological reasons for the descent of this social class into poverty, their inability to rise above it, and their continuing subjugation to a stereotype developed by others—and all too often accepted by themselves. Carr also records the progress in Southern fiction of this negative stereotype, from antebellum writers who saw rednecks as threats to the social order, to post-Civil War writers who lamented the lost potential of these people and urged sympathy and understanding, to contemporary writers who favor acceptance. Ultimately, this work is an evaluation of individual Southern fiction writers in their capacity to rise above stereotyping.

For more information contact the UW Press at phone: 608-263-1110, email: uwiscpress@uwpress.wisc.edu

Book cover has a gray and blue version of the Confederate flag

LC: 96-038510 PS
196 pp.  6 x 9
ISBN 0-87972-722-5 Paper $16.95 t
(ISBN 0-87972-721-7 Cloth is out of print)



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