“Inscoe’s vast knowledge of southern life-writing, his grounding in southern history, and his insight into the various southern tempers have resulted in a book that is a significant contribution to the field.”—Fred Hobson, author of Tell About the South: The Southern Rage to Explain
“Infused with insights drawn from the vast experiences of an accomplished scholar, a caring teacher, and a passionate and empathetic reader. Inscoe’s defense of the unique potential that autobiography has to shape our emotional understanding of the southern past is lucid, engaging, and utterly convincing.”—Jennifer Jensen Wallach, author of Closer to the Truth Than Any Fact: Memoir, Memory, and Jim Crow
"These highly readable essays offer nuanced and probing examinations of a wide range of important and, in the case of quite a few, neglected U.S. southern autobiographies and memoirs. With its original and arresting insights into the psychological repercussions of racism, classism, and gender discrimination, John C. Inscoe’s Writing the South through the Self is especially valuable to anyone who teaches life writing in the South or the history of Jim Crow."—Jim Watkins, editor of Southern Selves: From Mark Twain and Eudora Welty to Maya Angelou and Kaye Gibbons, a Collection of Autobiographical Writing
"This book is an answer to a prayer for people wanting to learn about and understand the South. Along with good history on a complex region of the United States, we see it through the eyes and hearts of Southerners telling their own stories. From racism, white life in Appalachia, mixed race identities, to the agonies of Jim Crow, we hear the voices of Lillian Smith, Richard Wright, Jimmy Carter, Zora Neale Hurston, and a host of others speaking in this absorbing book."—Constance W. Curry, author of Silver Rights
“Writing the South is without a doubt a valuable contribution to the field of southern studies.”—Janelle Collins, Arkansas Review
“Writing the South through the Self provides a solid introductory text for scholars and students looking to survey the parameters of southern autobiographical writing.”—Lisa Hinrichsen, Arkansas Historical Quarterly
“[The book’s] breadth and the richness of its sources and interpretation make this book an important contribution to southern studies and biographical research.”—Jennifer Ritterhouse, Biography
“Using lives recounted by the southerners who lived them, Inscoe skillfully teases out meanings about the larger southern experience embedded in memoir. . . . In his hands, autobiography becomes an excellent teaching tool, which he uses to inspire students and promote empathy.”—Pamela Tyler, Journal of Southern History