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Chapter 10 - Everyday Literary Culture in the Nineteenth Century

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 April 2021

Harilaos Stecopoulos
Affiliation:
Department of English, University of Iowa
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Summary

This essay surveys the literate culture of the antebellum and Civil War eras among marginal southerners – African Americans, both free and enslaved, and poor and middle-class whites – and explores examples of the ways reading and writing, though quite distinct in formal pedagogies, blended together in the literary lives of the self-educated. Focused especially on Basil Armstrong Thomasson, a yeoman farmer in North Carolina whose diary records his reading practices as well as original verse, and John M. Washington, a Virginia man who kept a diary while enslaved, the essay presents a study in the surprising complexity and variegation of the textual landscape such people inhabited and helped create. It also discusses the scarcer archival traces of the literacy practices of ordinary southern women.

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Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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