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Robert P. Steed - The Disappearing South?: studies in regional change and continuity

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There is widespread agreement that the South has changed dramatically since the end of World War II. Social, demographic, economic, and political changes have altered significantly the region long considered the nations most distinctive. There is less agreement, however, about the extent to which the forces of nationalization have eroded the major elements of Southern distinctiveness. Although this volume does not purport to settle the debate on Southern political change, it does present a variety of recent evidence that helps put this important debate into perspective. In the process it helps clarify the contemporary politics of the South for readers ranging from the scholar to the more casual observer. The essays in The Disappearing South address the ongoing debate. Contributors, in addition to the editors, include E. Lee Bernick, Earl Black, Merle Black, Lewis Bowman, Edward G. Carmines, Patrick Cotter, Thomas Eamon, Douglas G. Feig, John C. Green, James L. Guth, William E. Hulbary, Anne E. Kelley, Lyman A. Kellstedt, David M. Olson, John Shelton Reed, Harold Stanley, James G. Stovall, John Theilmann, Stephen H. Wainscott, and Allen Wilhite.

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title The Disappearing South Studies in Regional Change and Continuity - photo 1

title:The Disappearing South? : Studies in Regional Change and Continuity
author:Steed, Robert P.
publisher:University of Alabama Press
isbn10 | asin:0817304398
print isbn13:9780817304393
ebook isbn13:9780585141084
language:English
subjectSouthern States--Politics and government--1951- , Regionalism--Southern States, Political culture--Southern States.
publication date:1990
lcc:F216.2.D57 1990eb
ddc:320.975
subject:Southern States--Politics and government--1951- , Regionalism--Southern States, Political culture--Southern States.
Page iii
The Disappearing South?
Studies in Regional Change and Continuity
Edited by
Robert P. Steed
Laurence W. Moreland
Tod A. Baker
The University of Alabama Press
Tuscaloosa and London
Page iv
Copyright 1990 by
The University of Alabama Press
Tuscaloosa, Alabama 35487
All rights reserved
Manufactured in the United States of America
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
The Disappearing South?
Bibliography: p.
Includes index.
1. Southern StatesPolitics and government1951
2. RegionalismSouthern States. 3. Political culture
Southern States. I. Steed, Robert P. II. Moreland,
Laurence W. III. Baker, Tod A.
F216.2.D57 1990 320.975 88-29605
ISBN 0-8173-0439-8
British Library Cataloguing-in-Publication Data available
Page v
CONTENTS
Foreword
John Shelton Reed
vii
Acknowledgments
xi
Part I
Southern-National Political Convergence
1
1. The South in the Senate: Changing Patterns of Representation on Committees
Merle Black
Earl Black
5
2. Ideological Realignment in the Contemporary South: Where Have all the Conservatives Gone?
Edward G. Carmines
Harold W. Stanley
21
3. The Transformation of Southern Political Elites: Regionalism Among Party and PAC Contributors
John C. Green
James L. Guth
34
4. Party Sorting at the Grass Roots: Stable Partisans and Party-Changers Among Florida's Precinct Officials
Lewis Bowman
William E. Hulbary
Anne E. Kelley
54
5. Consequences of Southern School Desegregation: Myth and Reality
Stephen H. Wainscott
71
Part II
The Continuing South
87
6. Dimensions of Southern Public Opinion on Prayer in Schools
Douglas G. Feig
90

Page vi
7. Evangelical Religion and Support for Social Issue Policies: An Examination of Regional Variation
Lyman A. Kellstedt
107
8. Searching for the Mind of the South in the Second Reconstruction
Robert P. Steed
Laurence W. Moreland
Tad A. Baker
125
9. Labor Money in Southern Elections: Continuation of an Old Trend
John Theilmann
Allen Wilhite
141
10. The Militant Republican Right in North Carolina Elections: Legacy of the Old Politics of Race
Thomas F. Eamon
156
Postscript
174
Notes
177
Selected Bibliography
204
Contributors
216
Index
220

Page vii
FOREWORD
John Shelton Reed
Although the editors of The Disappearing South? have cast their title as a question rather than an assertion, surely if the answer goes without saying for anyone, it must do for political scientists. Doesn't it? After all, as John C. Green and James L. Guth write in their contribution to this volume, "the steady erosion of 'southern distinctiveness'... has been the most dramatic change in recent American politics." Even the quotation marks around "southern distinctiveness" suggest that such distinctiveness is now elusive, if not illusory, at least when it comes to politics.
Nevertheless, one enduring element of "southern distinctiveness" has been a concern for what that distinctiveness might be, a concern that amuses other Americans when it doesn't just get on their nerves. This book's title places it in a long tradition of inquiry, further specified by its subtitle, "Studies in Regional Change and Continuity," and one continuity has been the persisting worry by several generations now of thoughtful Dixiologistsjournalists, students of history and literature, scholars from nearly every social-science disciplineabout whether they have anything left to talk about. This volume presents the political-science version of that longstanding debate, and those who know it in other contexts will recognize many familiar themes.
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