Amazon.com Review
Letters, diaries, slave narratives, and southern literature retrace the steps of the women of the American South in this historical volume. Filled with photographs,
Tara Revisited present the facts and fiction behind such southern icons as Scarlett O'Hara, Mrs. Butterworth, Clara Barton, and others who were plantation mistresses, slaves, city dwellers, and even soldiers. Clinton brings to life the joy and suffering of women in both black and white communities, beginning with antebellum society, continuing through the Reconstruction era, and ending with the present day. The final chapter, "The Road to Tara," discusses the Southern Belle, the Southern Mammy, and the implications of our fascination with those figures from a past which may or may not have existed only in our minds and our movies.
From Library Journal
Historian Clinton (who has taught at Harvard, Brandeis, and Brown) returns to the Civil War South, scene of her Divided Houses: Gender and the Civil War (LJ 9/15/92) and The Plantation Mistress: Woman's World in the Old South (LJ 11/15/82). Although not as richly detailed as either of those earlier works, Tara Revisited is valuable for its segue into the postwar mythology of the Lost Cause-a mythology that affected countless books and films. Clinton's thorough knowledge of her subject, reliance on primary sources, and lively style all render the book accessible to any reader wanting a brief introduction to Southern women-both black and white-of the period. Libraries collecting Southern or women's history will want this title, and others should consider; see also Elizabeth Fox-Genovese's study, Within the Plantation Household: Black and White Women in the Old South (LJ 12/88).
Donna L. Cole, Leeds P.L., Ala.Copyright 1995 Reed Business Information, Inc.
--This text refers to the
Hardcover
edition.