Book Description
Jacob F. Riverss Cultural Values in the Southern Sporting Narrative examines classic southern fiction--along with lesser-known literary works--with an eye to the ways that southern writers such as William Elliott, William Gilmore Simms, and William Faulkner depict hunting and outdoorsmanship. Blending literary history with sociology and cultural criticism, Rivers explores the recurring themes of honor, fair play, and noblesse oblige and illustrates how the sporting genre has reflected the moral consciousness of the American South. Relationships between human beings and animals, as well as the connections between landowners and the soil they claimed as private, have been a key element of southern literature for 150 years. Hunting has provided rich symbolic and philosophical material for writers who celebrate its rituals, its etiquette, and its ability to unite humanity and nature. Rivers examines the role of these moral values and traditions in the literature over time, highlighting early works such as Elliott's Carolina Sports by Land and Water and Simms's The Cub of the Panther, both of which delve into the relationship of man as an extension of nature. He notes the continuity of values in later hunting fiction as well, and maintains that while the twentieth century authors engage similar themes, many of the old traditions are lost to modern society. Faulkner and other modern writers that Rivers includes both share the traditions and chronicle the traditions demise. Looking at the writings of Elliott, Simms, and Faulkner, along with those of Archibald Rutledge, Caroline Gordon, James Kilgo, and others, Rivers also addresses the themes of the Southern sporting ethos as an integral part of proper aristocratic conduct. He also looks at the southerner's characteristic attachment to family, land, and the inherited moral imperatives of this society, as well as the code of honorable sportsmanship.
About the Author
JACOB F. RIVERS III spent much of his youth hunting and fishing in the South Carolina lowcountry. He received a Ph.D. in American literature from the University of South Carolina in Columbia, where he now serves as director of the Office of Veteran Services.
Cultural Values in the Southern Sporting Narrative FROM THE PUBLISHER
Jacob E. Rivers's Cultural Values in the Southern Sporting Narrative examines classic southern fiction - along with lesser known literary works - with an eye to the ways that southern writers such as William Elliott, William Gilmore Simms, and William Faulkner depict hunting and outdoorsmanship. Blending literary history with sociology and cultural criticism, Rivers explores the recurring themes of honor, fair play, and noblesse oblige and illustrates how the sporting genre has reflected the moral consciousness of the American South.
SYNOPSIS
The southern sporting (hunting) narrative reveals southern writers' concerns with their fellows' inability to live in harmony with nature, argues the author. The "morally responsible sportsman" was raised as an ideal, an individual who could "reenter the primitive unity of nature and man" and recognize his responsibility to his surroundings and society. The argument is supported by readings from 140 years of southern literature beginning in 1846. Annotation ©2003 Book News, Inc., Portland, OR