Finding Purple America
Finding Purple America: The South and the Future of American Cultural Studies
JON SMITH
Series: The New Southern Studies
Copyright Date: 2013
Published by: University of Georgia Press
Pages: 208
https://www.jstor.org/stable/j.ctt46nd57
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Book Info
Finding Purple America
Book Description:

The new southern studies has had an uneasy relationship with both American studies and the old southern studies. In Finding Purple America, Jon Smith, one of the founders of the new movement, locates the source of that unease in the fundamentally antimodern fantasies of both older fields. The old southern studies tends to view modernity as a threat to a mystic southern essence-a dangerous outside force taking the form of everything from a "bulldozer revolution" to a "national project of forgetting." Since the rise of the New Americanists, American studies has also imagined itself to be in a permanent crisis mode, seeking to affiliate the field and the national essence with youth countercultures that sixties leftists once imagined to be "the future." Such fantasies, Smith argues, have resulted in an old southern studies that cannot understand places like Birmingham or Atlanta (or cities at all) and an American studies that cannot understand red states. Most Americans live in neither a comforting, premodern Mayberry nor an exciting, postmodern Los Angeles but rather in what postcolonialists call "alternative modernities" and "hybrid cultures" whose relationships to past and future, to stability and change, are complex and ambivalent. Looking at how "the South" has played in global metropolitan pop culture since the nineties and at how southern popular and high culture alike have, in fact, repeatedly embraced urban modernity, Smith masterfully weaves together postcolonial theory, cultural studies, Lacanian psychoanalysis, and, surprisingly, marketing theory to open up the inconveniently in-between purple spaces and places that Americanist and southernist fantasies about "who we are"have so long sought to foreclose.

eISBN: 978-0-8203-4572-7
Subjects: History, Sociology
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  1. Front Matter
    Front Matter (pp. i-vi)
  2. Table of Contents
    Table of Contents (pp. vii-viii)
  3. PREFACE
    PREFACE (pp. ix-xviii)
  4. INTRODUCTION. What Does an American Studies Scholar Want?
    INTRODUCTION. What Does an American Studies Scholar Want? (pp. 1-26)

    What does it mean to be hip in the twenty-first century? If you’re a baby boomer, particularly in academia, you may still think it has something to do with vocal countercultural politics, with sex, drugs, and rock ’n’ roll, with rebelling against squares like Dwight Eisenhower and, say, Perry Miller. If you’re an Xer (a term few use anymore), on the other hand, that whole thing has probably long looked kind of played. Back in the 1990s there’s a good chance you read Douglas Coupland’s Generation X, with its bitterness toward “bleeding ponytails” and other “sold-out” boomers who had succeeded...

  5. Part I. Disrupting Everyone’s Enjoyment
    • ONE SONGS THAT MOVE HIPSTERS TO TEARS: Johnny Cash and the New Melancholy
      ONE SONGS THAT MOVE HIPSTERS TO TEARS: Johnny Cash and the New Melancholy (pp. 29-49)

      In her afterword to the 2004 essay collection Loss, Judith Butler applauds “a new kind of scholarship that seeks to bring theory to bear on the analysis of social and political life, in particular, to the temporality of social and political life” (467). As it turns out, this “new” scholarship is interested in concepts that are far from new to southern studies: the presence of the past, the experience of defeat, and the sense of community. “The past is not actually the past,” she writes, not only channeling William Faulkner’s Gavin Stevens but also, as she continues, deconstructively glossing him,...

    • TWO GERMAN LESSONS: On Getting Over a Lost Supremacy
      TWO GERMAN LESSONS: On Getting Over a Lost Supremacy (pp. 50-64)

      As displacements of irresponsible white melancholy, the escapist enjoyments of old southern studies scholars and of melancholy hipsters are hardly the worst responses to modernity one encounters. As I was finishing this book, the news was filling with reports about the proposed Ugandan “Anti-Homosexuality Bill,” known to the U.S. Left as the “Kill the Gays” bill. The bill’s reasoning derived in part from the writings and statements of “ex-gay” Richard Cohen and others on the U.S. religious Right, including both Rick Warren (who in 2008 had declared Uganda the world’s second official “purpose-driven nation,”² and who was very late to...

    • THREE OUR TURN: On Gen X, Wearing Vintage, and Neko Case
      THREE OUR TURN: On Gen X, Wearing Vintage, and Neko Case (pp. 65-86)

      People who aren’t of Naomi Klein’s generation and class may feel little sympathy or even patience toward the bourgeois anomie she chronicles at the opening of “Alt. Everything,” the third chapter of her popular book No Logo. “After college, should I travel in Europe? But it’s so been done!” Particularly troubling, perhaps, are the elevation of styles to the level of ideas (or the reduction of ideas to the level of styles) and the apparent absence in these girls of any idea that a good, worthwhile, happy, ethical life might be lived regardless of its stylistic novelty. The idea that...

  6. Part II. Reconciliations with Modernity
    • FOUR TWO TIES AND A PISTOL: Faulkner, Metropolitan Fashion, and “the South”
      FOUR TWO TIES AND A PISTOL: Faulkner, Metropolitan Fashion, and “the South” (pp. 89-105)

      Sometimes the trivia of everyday life can be hard to find pleasure in. One reason my wife and I loved Birmingham so much is that we had moved there from a small town in Mississippi (where my wife had been teaching at a small public liberal arts university) an hour from the nearest interstate. Consumer culture in such places is hard to describe if you haven’t lived in one of them. There is no Starbucks to complain about, nor any independent, more “authentic” coffeeshop at which to exert one’s consumption-as-protest. Instead, there is, almost invariably, a strip of four-lane highway...

    • FIVE FLYING WITHOUT WINGS: Race, Civic Branding, and Identity Politics in Two Twenty-first-century American Cities
      FIVE FLYING WITHOUT WINGS: Race, Civic Branding, and Identity Politics in Two Twenty-first-century American Cities (pp. 106-125)

      On March 2, 2003, when readers of the Boston Globe opened their Sunday papers and turned to the Parade magazine inside, they may have noticed, with St. Patrick’s Day fast approaching, the full-page Franklin Mint advertisement on the back cover for the “Irish Blessing Charm Bracelet” featuring “the treasured symbols of Ireland captured in stunning 24 karat gold accents, and steeped in the traditions of Irish history and design.” However, readers of papers throughout the South—the Greensboro News & Record, Atlanta Journal-Constitution, Birmingham News, Mobile Register, and Orlando Sentinel, for example—found quite a different Franklin Mint ad reigning...

    • SIX IN THE GARDEN
      SIX IN THE GARDEN (pp. 126-136)

      In May 2003 I was walking through Kew Gardens—the horticultural equivalent of the British Museum—with my English half-sister when we came upon a small ornamental tree. Though a gardener—like seemingly everybody else in England—she was unfamiliar with it. I wasn’t, but we read the label to be sure: Lagerstroemia indica. Crepe myrtle. It was a postcolonial moment for me, because crepe myrtle, though native to China and Korea, is one of the most widely used flowering trees in the yards and gardens of the southeastern United States. It wasn’t just that I saw something with which...

  7. NOTES
    NOTES (pp. 137-150)
  8. WORKS CITED
    WORKS CITED (pp. 151-164)
  9. INDEX
    INDEX (pp. 165-176)
  10. Back Matter
    Back Matter (pp. 177-177)
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