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A Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction Book

A Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction
A Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction, 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 Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction has a rating of 4 stars
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A Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction, 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 Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction
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  • A Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction
  • Written by author Duane Carr
  • Published by University of Wisconsin Press, June 1997
  • "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
  • “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 su
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Preface
1The Nature of the Stereotype3
2William Byrd: The Dispossessed as Outlander15
3William Gilmore Simms: The Dispossessed as Villain19
4The Southwest Humorists: The Dispossessed as Buffoon and Jester25
5The New South and the Forgotten People35
6Joel Chandler Harris: The Dispossessed as Tragic Figure41
7George Washington Cable: The Dispossessed as Benefactor47
8Kate Chopin: The Dispossessed as Childlike Adult53
9Ellen Glasgow: The Dispossessed as Raw Talent59
10Elizabeth Madox Roberts: The Dispossessed as Human Being69
11The Persistence of the Stereotype75
12William Faulkner: The Dispossessed as Tragic Hero and Comic Villain81
13Erskine Caldwell: The Dispossessed as Grotesque Victim93
14Flannery O'Connor: The Dispossessed as Redeemer107
15Eudora Welty: The Dispossessed as Malevolent Simpleton113
16Cormac McCarthy: The Dispossessed as Naked Ape125
17Harry Crews: The Dispossessed as Poor White Trash135
18The Beginnings of Something Positive141
19Robert Penn Warren: The Dispossessed as Southerner145
20Harriette Arnow: The Dispossessed as Self-Reliant Woman157
21Conclusion: Trends and Possibilities167
Notes173
Works Cited175
Index185


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A Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction, 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 Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction

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A Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction, 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 Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction

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A Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction, 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 Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction

A Question of Class: The Redneck Stereotype in Southern Fiction

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