Southern fiction

Martyn Bone*

*Corresponding author for this work

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1 Citation (Scopus)

Abstract

In 1945, Allen Tate declared that “the Southern literary renascence … is over.” This was a startling claim, not least given its source: as a poet, novelist, and essayist, Tate had been both a creative participant in and critical shaper of the “renascence.” Ten years earlier, Tate had argued that “From the peculiar historical consciousness of the Southern writer has come good work of a special order” – literature that, by taking a “backward glance,” was “conscious of the past in the present.” Between 1929 and 1945, “good work” by Tate, William Faulkner, Thomas Wolfe, Robert Penn Warren, Richard Wright, Zora Neale Hurston, Eudora Welty, Carson McCullers, and others disproved H. L. Mencken's notorious accusation that the South was “almost as sterile, artistically, intellectually, culturally, as the Sahara Desert.” Tate's announcement that the Southern Renaissance was over, therefore, seemed premature: that same year, Welty published her powerful novel Delta Wedding (1945), while 1946 witnessed the appearance of Warren's opus All the King's Men. Furthermore, The Portable Faulkner (1946) triggered a rapid revival of interest in Faulkner that culminated with the 1949 Nobel Prize for Literature. Yet in the 1950s modern Southern literature was, like the South itself, at a crossroads. The region, as both a social reality and a literary subject, was changing in profound ways. The prominent social, economic, and cultural role of what the Nashville Agrarians in I'll Take My Stand (1930) termed “the agrarian tradition” was in terminal decline.

Original languageEnglish
Title of host publicationThe Cambridge Companion to American Fiction After 1945
EditorsJohn Duvall
Number of pages13
Publishercambridge university press (cup)
Publication date2011
Pages154-166
ISBN (Print)9780521196314
ISBN (Electronic)9781139013888
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2011

Bibliographical note

Publisher Copyright:
© Cambridge University Press 2012.

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