Book contents
- Understanding the American South
- Cambridge Studies on the American South
- Understanding the American South
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Introduction
- Part I Understanding the American South and the Civil War in a New Century
- Part II Understanding the South and the American Identity
- Part III Understanding Slavery, Race, and Inequality in the American South
- 5 The Problem of Slavery Reconsidered
- 6 The Legacy of W. E. B. DuBois
- 7 An American Elegy
- 8 Transforming Southern History
- 9 The Fraying Fabric of Community
- Part IV Understanding History and Irony
- Bibliography
- Index
7 - An American Elegy
The American South during the Ages of Capital and Inequality
from Part III - Understanding Slavery, Race, and Inequality in the American South
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 December 2024
- Understanding the American South
- Cambridge Studies on the American South
- Understanding the American South
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Introduction
- Part I Understanding the American South and the Civil War in a New Century
- Part II Understanding the South and the American Identity
- Part III Understanding Slavery, Race, and Inequality in the American South
- 5 The Problem of Slavery Reconsidered
- 6 The Legacy of W. E. B. DuBois
- 7 An American Elegy
- 8 Transforming Southern History
- 9 The Fraying Fabric of Community
- Part IV Understanding History and Irony
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
After the Civil War, the American South seemed to be the exception to American exceptionalism. As the late British historian Eric Hobsbawm asserted, after the end of Reconstruction, the South remained “agrarian, poor, backward, and resentful; whites resenting the never-forgotten defeat and blacks the disfranchisement and ruthless subordination imposed by whites when reconstruction ended.” Confederate defeat and the emancipation of slaves left the American South faced with the challenge of embarking upon the “Age of Capital” while largely bereft of capital. This chapter focuses on how the southern capital shortage turned much of the rural South into a “vast pawn shop” with financing for planting crops coming from a mortgage on a crop not yet produced. As beggars for capital, the American South became the ragged stepchild of the industrializing American economy, an economic backwater controlled by outside capital. Active economic legacies of the capital-starved South still haunt the region’s economic landscape in the form of underdeveloped human capital.
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- Understanding the American SouthSlavery, Race, Identity, and the American Century, pp. 169 - 191Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2024