Alumni Voices: Prof. Angie Maxwell (University of Arkansas) on the South and Donald Trump
Prof. Angie Maxwell, Diane D. Blair Professor of Southern Studies and Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Arkansas, has penned a new piece exploring southern identity, whiteness, and Donald Trump's rise for Virginia Quarterly Review. We've reproduced an excerpt below, but for the full article, click here.
Southern whiteness is not just about race. Yes, that is how it started. But as Southern whites faced the changing twentieth century, they became the “other” or foil to American identity. Each time the criticism poured in, they defined themselves in opposition to a growing pantheon of enemies. Southern whiteness expands beyond racial identity and supremacy, encapsulating rigid stances on religion, education, the role of government, the view of art, an opposition to science and expertise and immigrants and feminism, and any other topic that comes under attack. This ideological web of inseparable strands envelops a community and covers everything, and it is easily (and intentionally by Donald Trump) snagged.
Grad Research: Julie Kantor in the LARB
Congratulations to UT AMS graduate student Julie Kantor, who recently had some of the poems from her chapbook Land published in the "No Crisis" issue of the Los Angeles Review of Books Quarterly. We spoke to Julie about her work when Land came out last spring, and we're excited to able to share a selection with you, below.
Grad Research: Kirsten Ronald and the Public History of the Red River District
UT AMS grad student Kirsten Ronald (pictured in the archive, above) has been taking her teaching out of the classroom and onto the streets of Austin in a project she's been developing with local organization Preservation Austin. Kirsten has been working with high school students, teaching them to do oral history and archival research focusing on Austin's Red River cultural district. Kirsten sez:
Austin's vibrant Red River Cultural District is currently being threatened by encroaching development and rising rents, so Preservation Austin is working with the Vandegrift High School FFA chapter to raise awareness about the historic and cultural importance of the area and its buildings. The stretch of Red River Street between 6th and 10th Streets is home to iconic bars and music venues like Stubb's, Elysium, Mohawk and the now-shuttered Emo's, all of which have helped make Austin the "Live Music Capital of the World." With many properties dating back to the mid-1800s, the District can also provide valuable insight into what makes Austin tick. I'm excited to be teaching a new generation of preservationists and oral historians that while growth, development, and change are important components of any living city, the forms they take are not inevitable.
The website for the project is now live and the work that the students do producing an audio tour of the area will eventually be featured on Preservation Austin's app.