Английская Википедия:Confederate literature

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Шаблон:Short description A Confederate novel was a type of fiction specific to North America that was written by Southerners and that centered Confederate States of America nationalism and existed to rationalize and defend a slavery-based economy and create a self-perpetuating cultural ethos.[1] More broadly defined, Confederate literature included nationalistic poetry, songs, and certain memoirs.[2][3] It was stylistically preceded by plantation fiction and anti-Tom novels.[1] Much of Confederate fiction was published serially in magazines and newspapers.[1] Confederate literature long outlasted the nominal Confederate nation-state.[2] Confederate literature and Lost Cause mythology had a symbiotic relationship following the military defeat of the Confederate States of America, a synthesis that culminated in many senses with the 1905 novel The Clansman, which was adapted for film as The Birth of a Nation.[1] Other influential Confederate novels included Richard Malcolm Johnston's Georgia Sketches (1864) and Augusta Jane Evans' Macaria; or, the Altars of Sacrifice (1864). John Hunt Morgan is lionized in most Confederate fiction of Kentucky.[4] One 1898 example is a book called Camp Fires of the Confederacy: Confederate poems and selected songs dedicated the "brave and intrepid host...[in] the long and gallant struggle of the South for political emancipation and autonomy."[5]

See also

References

Шаблон:Reflist

Further reading

  • Hutchison, Coleman (2012) Apples and Ashes: Literature, Nationalism, and the Confederate States of America. University of Georgia Press, 2012 ISBN 978-0-8203-4244-3
  • Starnes, John Eric. (2017). Rebels Against the Dream: the American White Nationalist Novel and the Culture of Defeat. Praca doktorska. Katowice : Uniwersytet Śląski


Шаблон:AmericanCivilWar-stub Шаблон:US-lit-stub