The Sonic South


Nineteenth-Century Plantation Literature

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Sale price$150.00


By Rebeccah Bechtold
Imprint: UNIVERSITY OF PENNSYLVANIA PRESS
Release Date:
Format:
HARDBACK
Dimensions:
229 x 152 mm
Weight:

Pages:
256

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Description

Rebeccah Bechtold is Associate Professor of English at Wichita State University.

"A sophisticated and ambitious work. Bechtold combines theoretical insight with a wide literary range in a discussion of the art of listening within fictive plantation literature. With conceptual clarity and archival acuity, this book offers a decisive intervention into nineteenth-century literature by demonstrating how soundscapes--music, voices, and regional distinctions--shaped white hearers' perceptions of race, space, and power."-- "Katrina Thompson Moore, Saint Louis University" "The Sonic South amplifies the antebellum struggle over the sound of the South. It offers fascinating new insights into the way that the soundscape, from croaking frogs to Christian hymns, was interpreted in both abolitionist and proslavery depictions of the South. With research from contemporary spiritual and scientific theories, and exceptional analysis, Bechtold attunes us to this underappreciated element in the contested conceptions of race and slavery in antebellum America."-- "Paul Musselwhite, Dartmouth College" "In The Sonic South, antebellum literature emerges as full of both sounds and silences, with narration alternately muffling and amplifying what readers hear. Bechtold's analysis turns listening into knowing."-- "Kathryn McKee, University of Mississippi"

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