“We’re what we are because of the Past”: History, Memory, Nostalgia, and Identity in Walter Sullivan’s <i>The Long, Long Love</i>

Authors

  • Tanfer Emin Tune Hacettepe University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.22439/asca.v46i2.5134

Abstract

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.

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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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Articles