The Most Southern Place on Earth, James C. Cobb
The Most Southern Place on Earth, James C. Cobb
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The Most Southern Place on Earth
The Mississippi Delta and the Roots of Regional Identity

Author: James C. Cobb

Narrator: David Stifel

Unabridged: 20 hr 54 min

Format: Digital Audiobook Download

Publisher: Tantor Media

Published: 09/28/2021


Synopsis

"Cotton obsessed, Negro obsessed," Rupert Vance called it in 1935. "Nowhere but in the Mississippi Delta," he said, "are antebellum conditions so nearly preserved."

This crescent of bottomlands between Memphis and Vicksburg, lined by the Yazoo and Mississippi rivers, remains in some ways what it was in 1860: a land of rich soil, wealthy planters, and desperate poverty—the blackest and poorest counties in all the South. And yet it is a cultural treasure house as well—the home of Muddy Waters, B. B. King, Charley Pride, Walker Percy, Elizabeth Spencer, and Shelby Foote. Painting a fascinating portrait of the development and survival of the Mississippi Delta, a society and economy that is often seen as the most extreme in all the South, James C. Cobb offers a comprehensive history of the Delta, from its first white settlement in the 1820s to the present. Exploring the rich black culture of the Delta, Cobb explains how it survived and evolved in the midst of poverty and oppression, beginning with the first settlers in the overgrown, disease-ridden Delta before the Civil War to the bitter battles and incomplete triumphs of the civil rights era.

In this comprehensive account, Cobb offers new insight into "the most southern place on earth," untangling the enigma of grindingly poor but prolifically creative Mississippi Delta.

About James C. Cobb

James C. Cobb is B. Phinizy Spalding Distinguished Professor in the History of the American South at the University of Georgia. His numerous publications include Redefining Southern Culture and The Brown Decision, Jim Crow, and Southern Identity (both Georgia), Away Down South, The Selling of the South: The Southern Crusade for Industrial Development, 1936-1990 and The Most Southern Place on Earth: The Mississippi Delta and the Roots of Regional Identity.


Reviews

Goodreads review by Cooper

Incredibly well-researched. This book gives the Delta the academic respect and attention that it deserves as a region not isolated from the historical currents that have shaped American history, but rather one that has been defined by (and itself helps to define) national social and economic trends......more

Goodreads review by David

This book chronicles the most shameful behavior that humans are capable of, in our race for comfort, power, prestige and privilege. All on the backs and broken bodies of others, those with the least, those who continue to come up on the short end of the stick.......more

Goodreads review by James

I think this should be required reading for college civics as much as sociology or ethnography, a very good look at how some identies are formed and shortly taske over a culture and define how others look at that culture......more

A social history of epic and literary proportions. It's a very readable book with lots of information about The Yazoo-Mississippi Delta all the way from Reconstruction to our modern Welfare times. The intervention of the Federal government to allegedly improve the status of blacks, whether it was at......more