A Mind To Stay Here
Closing Conference Comments on Southern Exceptionalism
John Egerton, Nashville, Tennessee
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Overview:
Writer John Egerton reflects upon thirty years of chronicling Dixie's Americanization and America's southernization from his post in Nashville. He discusses the persistence of "southern" themes and offers subjects for books that he hopes other writers will pursue.

Presentation Sections:
A Mind To Stay Here | Recommended Resources and Selected Writings by John Egerton

Video:
Part 1 (11:01 min.)
How Egerton came to write The Americanization of Dixie (1974). Freelancing in Nashville. What he didn't write, and why. A Story of Utopias. Southern Food. Changes in the publishing business. The mid-1980s and Egerton begins Speak Now Against the Day.
Part 2 (7:01 min.)
Egerton compares the social conditions and directions he observed in Americanization of Dixie with what he finds today. He bemoans the loss of the family farm, the drowning of New Orleans and the "exportation of the worst" of southern culture.
Part 3 (13:11 min.)
Recent politics in the South reveal how the tactics of Bush advisor Karl Rove built upon Nixon's Southern Strategy. With no pretense to a moderate—let alone progressive—course of action, the newest New South seeks its future in a utopian cocoon and its heaven in a gated community of the rich, the powerful, the acquisitive, and the pious.
Part 4 (6:33 min.)

Egerton reflects upon how the South is riddled with contradictions. He makes the claim that "if the South is ever saved, it will be the Black population that saves the South." He talks about the importance of integration in writing books, and he advocates for the importance of the rural life, as it is different from the urban experience.

Part 5 (7:06 min.)
Contradictions riddle the South. Former traitors turn super-patriots. A land of church-goers is also a place with high rates of murder and divorce. Egerton considers the importance of race in persistent southern distinctiveness.
Part 6 (3:14 min.)
Unfinished business. Egerton offers a list of book ideas about neglected but important and fascinating people and subjects.

About John Egerton:
John Egerton was born in Atlanta, Georgia, June 14, 1935, the son of William G. Egerton, a traveling salesman, and his wife, Rebecca White Egerton. The family settled in Cadiz, Kentucky, where John remained until leaving to attend Western Kentucky University, 1953-1954. From 1954 until 1956, he served in the United States Army. He earned a B.A. at the University of Kentucky in 1958 and an M.A. in 1960.

Between 1958 and 1960, Egerton was with the Public Relations Department of the University of Kentucky, and from 1960 to 1965, he was the Director of Public Information for the University of South Florida. He was a staff writer for Southern Education Report, 1965-1969, and for Race Relations Reporter, 1969-1971.

In 1971, Egerton began his career as a free-lance reporter. He was a contributing editor for Saturday Review of Education (1972-1973), Race Relations Reporter (1973-1974), and Southern Voices (1974-1975). From 1973-1975, he was a writer for Atlanta's Southern Regional Council. In 1977-1978, he was journalist-in-residence at Virginia Polytechnic Institute and State University. Egerton has written or edited eleven non-fiction books and contributed over two-hundred articles to periodicals. He has also been a participant in and writer for many projects or conferences dealing with desegregation and civil rights.

Video of John Egerton was taken at "The End of Southern Exceptionalism" conference held at Emory University in March 2006, an event organized by Professor Joseph Crespino of the Emory University History Department and Professor Matt Lassiter of the Department of History at the University of Michigan at Ann Arbor.

Presentation Sections:
A Mind To Stay Here | Recommended Resources and Selected Writings by John Egerton

Published: 29 November 2006

© 2006 John Egerton and Southern Spaces