Facing South (1976)
$3.50
Vol. 3, No 4
Excerpt from Cover Story:
Throughout the country, and even this region, people view the South through myth and stereotype. It's not surprising. If they turn to newspapers, to television and radio, to popular films and literature, to most history books and folklore, they encounter these distortions. They find insulting portraits of Southerners, whitewashed presentations of southern economics and politics, selective visions of history, misunderstandings of relationships between people, and between people and their land and work. Many trivial qualities are romanticized; other important ones are totally ignored. Blacks are presented only as victims of racism, and labor struggles are completely forgotten.
This view is inevitable when people simply treat the South as an aberration of mainstream America, or a remnant of some past culture. We at Southern Exposure look at the South from another perspective. This is our home, we are of it and examine it that we may know more of ourselves and our neighbors. These are the politics and culture that surround us and affect us daily, that we must analyze, praise and attack so our lives can grow and prosper. And this is the ground from which we must view the larger world. By listening to local tobacco farmers discuss the pressures on them to expand or die, we can better understand Earl Butz's plan for US agribusiness. By hearing a bluesman's story, we come to appreciate how a particular culture evolves from material hardship and inspires immense creativity.
Content
- 2 From Our Readers
- 4 Julian Bond: The Movement,Then and Now
- 17 SOUTHERN CITIES
- 18 Memphis: How to Stop the Developers
- 25 Pikeville: Millionaires and Mbile Homes
- 31 Norfolk: From Honky Tonk to Honky Glitter
- 35 Adam's Rooster
- 40 Born for Hard Luck
- 46 Tobacco in Transition
- 53 SPECIAL REPORT: TEXTILES
- 54 Textile Men: Looms, Loans and Lockouts
- 66 Textile Women: Three Generations in the Mill
- 73 A New Twist for Textiles
- 80 Textile Resources
- 86 The Quiet Dignity of Choice
- 95 Book Reviews

