Author's profile: Krzysztof Kowalczyk-Twarowski received his
doctorate with a dissertation about the fiction of J.M. Coetzee at Nicolas Copernicus
University. After doctoral research at Durban
he joined the Department of American Studies and the Centre for Colonial and
Post-colonial Studies at the University of Silesia. Kowalczyk-Twarowski has
published on Romantic writing, the regional novel in the USA, and work in post-colonial
studies (Coetzee, Naipaul, White), most recently, "The Allegorical Encounter:
Three Novels of J.M.Coetzee" in Zbiniew Bialas, ed. Aristippus Meets Crusoe:
Rethinking the Beach Encounter. Katowice: U of Silesia P, 1999. 125-43.
At present, he is working on a book on patterns in American regional writing.
E-mail: <kkowalcz@us.edu.pl>.
Southern American Regional Sensibility
versus the North
1. The prominence in early America of Virginians (e.g., George
Washington, Thomas Jefferson, Edmund Pendleton, James Madison, James Monroe)
may obscure a certain important fact. For all their influence well into the
nineteenth century, these men belonged to the landed gentry of the South, a
society and culture tottering perceptibly, along with the socio-economic order
on which it rested, even as the country was striving for independence. Although
these men were instrumental in breaking away from Great Britain, it is perhaps
more reasonable to think of them as Virginia aristocracy rather than national
leaders; localists rather than federalists. Daniel Boorstin terms the outcome
of their exertions on behalf of the nation the "supreme irony" where "The turmoil
of the war, the destruction wrought in Virginia by British troops, the disestablishment
of the church, the disruption of commerce, the decline of tobacco culture all
spelled the decline of the aristocracy and its institutions" (Boorstin 143).
A bitterer paradox relates specifically to Thomas Jefferson. A thoroughly liberal
mind, in the first draft of The Declaration of Independence, he included
a proposal to improve radically the position of the blacks in the South, with
a hint at their eventual emancipation. However, the Congress voted to drop the
notion while just a few decades later, the Northern states, in a complete about-face,
demanded that the South abolish slavery.
2. Several times in his career Jefferson withdrew from national
affairs to devote his energies to local politics and, on one occasion, to work
on his only book, Notes on the State of Virginia. Both in this text and
in his public service he identifies himself as Virginian first and American
second. His views were molded by the peculiar lifestyle of the Virginia aristocracy
with its unique brand of relaxed Anglicanism, broad tolerance of heterodoxy,
and the natural, nepotistic interface between the landed families and local
politics. Steeped in pastoralism, Jefferson was at first (in the 1770s and 1780s)
averse even to considering agrarianism the policy for his country. He believed
that relying on economic viability in an agriculturally-based society misses
the point, the true worth of a rural society residing in its sound morals and "permanence of government" (Jefferson qtd. in Baym 1, 654). He argued that manufacturers,
and the resultant urban squalor, should remain out of the country and he insisted
on shipping agricultural produce to Europe for processing, irrespective of expense.
The industrialist was Jefferson's bogeyman. Yet, although he abhorred industrialism,
he looked on the machine and its uses in a different light: "From Jefferson's
perspective, the machine is a token of that liberation of the human spirit to
be realized by the young American Republic; the factory system, on the other
hand, is but feudal oppression in a slightly modified form. Once the machine
is removed from the dark, crowded, grimy cities of Europe, he assumes that it
will blend harmoniously into the open countryside of his native land. He envisages
it turning millwheels, moving ships up rivers, and, all in all, helping transform
a wilderness into a society of the middle landscape" (Marx 150). Later, especially
during his presidency, he was forced to revise his views. A lifelong reader
and admirer of Theocritus and Virgil, Jefferson came round to regarding the
industrialization of America as the only safeguard of its sovereignty.
3. For about twenty years after Jefferson's death in 1826,
the tobacco industry sagging, many Virginians were still prepared to endorse
the prospective demise of slavery. At mid-century, however, a change made itself
felt: "By the 1850s, agricultural science and a revived plantation economy made
slavery much more attractive, halted the speed of manumissions, and replaced
Jeffersonianism by a reactionary paternalism" (Wish 5). The regional identity
of the whole South was reinforced, slavery retaining its pivotal role. Like
in the North, the public sentiment in the South was divided, yet in Dixie it
was becoming increasingly difficult not to take a stand on slavery. Thus, defending
or condemning slavery came to constitute an essential component of regional
identity. Among the apologists one cannot fail to include two names: George
Fitzhugh and John C. Calhoun (for Fitzhough, see Wish; for Calhoun, see Wilson).
Calhoun is on record stating in 1830 that the ideas formulated in The Declaration
of Independence are "always understood as applying only to the white race" (qtd. in Bartlett 83). Still, he was known for painstaking attention to his
own slaves' needs and general benevolence. Developing his perspective from standing
up for his native South Carolina to embracing the whole of the South, he argued
that slavery was good for America and his claim was predicated on the conviction
of the patent inferiority of the black race. Slavery, he believed, stabilized
the South and, by extension, the Union. Similarly, George Fitzhugh, in his 1854 Sociology for the South, asserted: "We shall build no system, attempt
to account for nothing, but simply point out what is natural and universal" (see in Wish 49). Thereby he voiced a crucial Southern belief, i.e., that the
region's culture and social system were natural, organic. Fitzhugh employed
Aristotle for his arguments and when making his obeisance to the Union in Cannibals
All! (1857), he declared his chief concern to be the Virginianising of Virginia
(see in Wish 95) and the adaptation of the system of government to suit the
South's needs.
4. The remarkable feature of Southern regional discourse up
to the Civil War is the transformation of the sense of the Other: The projected
reader of Southern writing; the Northern industrialist; the Southern black;
the Northern proletarian; the freed black. In Jefferson the tensions of Southern
life are still negligible. Ease suffuses his work and the only, mild, antagonist
is the Northern Unionist against whom the South wants to protect its economy
and lifestyle. At least until the first decade of the nineteenth century, Jefferson
saw himself as a counter balance to New England industrialism. The generation
of Calhoun and Fitzhugh went through a phase of Jeffersonianism, including the
readiness to countenance the manumissions. Slavery at the time was perceived
as temporary, although little thought was given to the future existence of emancipated
blacks in Southern realities, except for vague ideas of sending them back to
Africa. Calhoun hoped to encourage the unity of interest between the Southern
planter and the Northern industrialist and the failure of the idea was a personal
tragedy to him. In Fitzhugh's writings one notices much more antagonism. He
attacks industrialism, grossly exaggerating the squalor of Northern working-class
life, despite firsthand experience of the contrary being true. Fitzhugh's other
obstacle is the freed black who sets a dangerous example to the slaves and who
should be re-enslaved or sent back to Africa.
5. The war of 1861-65 brought into bold relief some of the
frictions previously discounted within Southern culture. One can think of the
example of Mark Twain, first volunteering for the Confederate army and then
deserting from it, to imagine the upheavals of the time. The war demonstrated
that the Southern whites were far from uniform in their views on society. Firstly,
in some areas, notably in the Appalachian Mountains, Unionism was popular. In
addition, the construction of Confederate laws and constitution followed the
principles of federal regulations, including a strong central government and
strict taxation. Secondly, more than fifty percent of the originally enlisted
Southern soldiers were missing from their regiments when the hostilities ended,
only a small proportion having been killed in action. Thirdly, faced with the
prospect of defeat some Confederate leaders were seriously considering enlisting
blacks, even at the cost of manumission. Thus the myth of the Southern establishment
standing unconditionally for racial integrity appears groundless.
6. If this is true and many Southern myths turn out to be
spurious, what exactly is it that shores up the region's mythology? What is
so appealing, and to whom, in the concept of the enduring uniqueness of Dixie?
One answer to these questions emanates from the relations between the South
and the North while the process of regional identity construction was at its
most intense. Rapid urbanization and industrialization created a need for a
usable opposite as an antidote to the speed of change. Emerging mass society,
ethnic and racial amalgamation, the consolidating state machinery menaced the
individual. The South seemed to be a very attractive cure for all these ills.
Thus, to a very large extent it was the North that gave rise to the myth of
Dixie, because the North needed it as desperately as the Southern whites professed
their wish to be left alone. In this dialectic, what was on the surface the
beginning of the end in social reality, i.e., the lost Civil War, proved to
be a lasting mythological attraction. For the pragmatic North the grace of the
romanticized Lost Causism of the South held a great deal of irresistible power.
Even in the heyday of abolitionist crusades, Northern representations of Southern
life tended to have an aura of charming mystery. In the twentieth century a
number of scholars drew attention to this relationship, notably Francis Pendleton
Gaines in his 1925 The Southern Plantation: A Study in the Development and
the Accuracy of a Tradition), Gunnar Myrdal in his 1944 An American Dilemma),
William Taylor in his 1963 Cavalier and Yankee: The Old South and American
National Character), and Patrick Gerster and Nicholas Cords in their 1978 "The Northern Origins of Southern Mythology."
7. The legend of the benevolent South, committed to land,
family, and chivalry, bewitched two classic, Northern-born, novelists: Francis
Scott Fitzgerald and Henry James. The former describes his father, descended
from a Maryland planter family, as a man who "came from another America" (Gerster
and Cords 330). In some of his short stories Fitzgerald betrays an uncritical
fascination with the myths of plantation life and the Southern belle. In The
Bostonians (1886) James idealizes the South although later on he was forced
to admit that at the time of writing the novel he knew very little about the
realities of life in Dixie. I argue that this myth of the South appears to be
a lasting standard in American literature: One recent Southern novel, Walker
Percy's 1987 The Thanatos Syndrome, provides an example for my notions
about representations of the South and its relationship with the North: "The
place where the strange events related in this book occur, Feliciana, is not
imaginary. It was so named by the Spanish. It was and is part of Louisiana,
a strip of pleasant pineland running from the Mississippi to the Perdido, a
curious region of a curious state. Never quite Creole or French or Anglo-Saxon
or Catholic or Baptist like other parishes of Louisiana, it has served over
the years as a refuge for all manner of malcontents. If America was settled
by dissenters from various European propositions, Feliciana was settled by dissenters
from the dissent, American Tories who had no use for the Revolution, disgruntled
Huguenots and Cavaliers from the Carolinas, New Englanders fleeing from Puritanism,
unionists who voted against secession, Confederate refugees from occupied New
Orleans, deserters from the Confederate Army, smugglers from both sides, criminals
holed up in the Honey Island Swamp" (7).
8. It looks at the beginning as if Percy were constructing
a subtly fictitious world, more imaginative than Hardy's Wessex, less Southern
than Faulkner's Yoknapatawpha. Yet soon it turns out that the novel is very
much about the South, more specifically about a contemporary variant of the
mystique of the Southern Way of Life. The mystique attracts a New Yorker, Bob
Como, who changes the spelling of his name to Comeaux, a more appropriately
Louisianian surname. He conducts an experiment, involving loading the local
water supply with chemicals in a massive social engineering project. What he
appeals to when explaining this is qualitarian sentiments he believes to be
a characteristic of Southerners. Comeaux is a modern Mephisto who argues for
elimination of low quality humans to enhance the Southern myth of quality as
opposed to indiscriminate democracy with the corollary deterioration of standards.
The novel evinces something traditionally Southern when intimating the narrator's
attitudes, different as they are from Comeaux's. At the end of the story the
narrator is satisfied to return to his original station in life, i.e., to being
a provincial psychiatrist. He shows no professional ambitions and is, generally,
passive. Southern life, and his own, seems to him self-explanatory. As his world
becomes threatened by a Yankee upstart, the menace must be dealt with to restore
the balance upset. The novel presents no significant change of the said standard,
unless we conceive of the paradise lost and regained motif as relative improvement.
This kind of self-defensive passivity is a perennial component of Southern literature,
its most articulate formulation coming of age in the 1930 Agrarian essays, compiled
in I'll Take My Stand. Here, the apologia pro domo sua more than
countervails the identification of the chief enemy, who, apparently, has remained
the same for over two hundred years.
Works Cited
Bartlett, Irving H. The American Mind in the Mid-Nineteenth
Century. New York: Thomas Y. Crowell Company, 1967.
Baym, Nina, Ronald Gottesman, Lawrence B. Holland, David Kalstone, Francis Murphy,
Herschel Parker, William H. Pritchard, and Patricia B. Wallace, eds. The Norton
Anthology of American Literature. New York: Norton, 1989. 2 Vols.
Boorstin, Daniel. The Americans: The Colonial Experience. New York: Random
House, 1958.
Gaines, Francis Pendleton. The Southern Plantation: A Study in the Development
and the Accuracy of a Tradition. New York: Columbia UP, 1924.
Gerster, Patrick, and Cords, Nicholas, eds. Myth and the American Experience.
Encino: Glencoe, 1978.
Marx, Leo. The Machine in the Garden: Technology and the Pastoral Ideal in
America. New York: Oxford UP, 1967.
Myrdal, Gunnar. An American Dilemma: The Negro Problem and the American Democracy.
New York: Harper and Bros., 1944.
Percy, Walker. The Thanatos Syndrome. London: Paladin, 1988.
Rubin, Louis D., Jr., ed. I'll Take My Stand: The South and the Agrarian
Tradition. New York: Harper and Bros., 1962.
Taylor, William. Cavalier and Yankee: The Old South and American National
Character. New York: Anchor Books, 1963.
Wilson, Clyde N., ed. The Essential Calhoun: Selections from Writings, Speeches,
and Letters. New Brunswick: Transaction Publishers, 2000.
Wish, Harvey, ed. Ante bellum: Writings of George Fitzhugh and Hinton Rowan
Helper on Slavery. New York: Putnam, 1960.