“We’re what we are because of the Past”: History, Memory, Nostalgia, and Identity in Walter Sullivan’s <i>The Long, Long Love</i>
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.22439/asca.v46i2.5134Abstract
Walter Sullivan (1924–2006), a Nashville, Tennessee native who spent most of his academic and professional life at Vanderbilt University, is generally considered by critics as a literary descendent of the first two generations of Fugitive-Agrarians and the Southern Renaissance to which they belong. This essay seeks to position Sullivan’s second, largely forgotten novel, The Long, Long Love as part of the postagrarian, post-Renaissance, postmodern, and post-southern American intellectual reevaluation of the South that questions tradition through an assertion of “pro–New South, pro–urban, and pro–capitalist” values and thoroughly reconsiders Civil War “truths,” myths, history, and memory.Downloads
Published
2014-09-01
How to Cite
Tune, T. E. (2014). “We’re what we are because of the Past”: History, Memory, Nostalgia, and Identity in Walter Sullivan’s <i>The Long, Long Love</i>. American Studies in Scandinavia, 46(2), 17–36. https://doi.org/10.22439/asca.v46i2.5134
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