Killers Of The Dream

Killers Of The Dream
Author: Lillian Smith
Publisher: W. W. Norton & Company
Total Pages: 274
Release: 1994-07-05
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780393311600

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Author cites the evils of segregation for both white and colored people and gives the history of race relations from pre-Civil War days.

Killers of the Dream

Killers of the Dream
Author: Lillian Eugenia Smith
Publisher: W. W. Norton
Total Pages: 264
Release: 1961
Genre: African Americans
ISBN: 9780393008845

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Published to wide controversy, it became the source (acknowledged or unacknowledged) of much of our thinking about race relations and was for many a catalyst for the civil rights movement. It remains the most courageous, insightful, and eloquent critique of the pre-1960s South. "I began to see racism and its rituals of segregation as a symptom of a grave illness," Smith wrote. "When people think more of their skin color than of their souls, something has happened to them." Today, readers are rediscovering in Smith's writings a forceful analysis of the dynamics of racism, as well as her prophetic understanding of the connections between racial and sexual oppression.

Strange Fruit

Strange Fruit
Author: Lillian Eugenia Smith
Publisher: Houghton Mifflin Harcourt
Total Pages: 388
Release: 1992
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 9780156856362

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Prelude and aftermath of a lynching in Georgia, depicting the South's unsolved racial problem.

A Lillian Smith Reader

A Lillian Smith Reader
Author: Lillian Eugenia Smith
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 345
Release: 2016
Genre: Literary Collections
ISBN: 0820349984

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Bringing together short stories, lectures, essays, op-ed pieces, interviews, andexcerpts from her longer fiction and nonfiction, A Lillian Smith Reader offers thefirst comprehensive collection of her work.

How Am I to Be Heard?

How Am I to Be Heard?
Author: Margaret Rose Gladney
Publisher: UNC Press Books
Total Pages: 545
Release: 2018-06-15
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 1469620340

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This compelling volume offers the first full portrait of the life and work of writer Lillian Smith (1897-1966), the foremost southern white liberal of the mid-twentieth century. Smith devoted her life to lifting the veil of southern self-deception about race, class, gender, and sexuality. Her books, essays, and especially her letters explored the ways in which the South's attitudes and institutions perpetuated a dehumanizing experience for all its people--white and black, male and female, rich and poor. Her best-known books are Strange Fruit (1944), a bestselling interracial love story that brought her international acclaim; and Killers of the Dream (1949), an autobiographical critique of southern race relations that angered many southerners, including powerful moderates. Subsequently, Smith was effectively silenced as a writer. Rose Gladney has selected 145 of Smith's 1500 extant letters for this volume. Arranged chronologically and annotated, they present a complete picture of Smith as a committed artist and reveal the burden of her struggles as a woman, including her lesbian relationship with Paula Snelling. Gladney argues that this triple isolation--as woman, lesbian, and artist--from mainstream southern culture permitted Smith to see and to expose southern prejudices with absolute clarity.

Memory of a Large Christmas

Memory of a Large Christmas
Author: Lillian Smith
Publisher: University of Georgia Press
Total Pages: 98
Release: 1996-10-01
Genre: Biography & Autobiography
ISBN: 9780820318424

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The author recounts her many happy Chistmases spent with eight brothers and sisters, including one Christmas when the family hosted a chain gang and their guards

The Fourth Ghost

The Fourth Ghost
Author: Robert H. Brinkmeyer, Jr.
Publisher: LSU Press
Total Pages: 440
Release: 2009-01-01
Genre: Literary Criticism
ISBN: 9780807133835

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In the 1949 classic Killers of the Dream, Lillian Smith described three racial "ghosts" haunting the mind of the white South: the black woman with whom the white man often had sexual relations, the rejected child from a mixed-race coupling, and the black mammy whom the white southern child first loves but then must reject. In this groundbreaking work, Robert H. Brinkmeyer, Jr., extends Smith's work by adding a fourth "ghost" lurking in the psyche of the white South -- the specter of European Fascism. He explores how southern writers of the 1930s and 1940s responded to Fascism, and most tellingly to the suggestion that the racial politics of Nazi Germany had a special, problematic relevance to the South and its segregated social system. As Brinkmeyer shows, nearly all white southern writers in these decades felt impelled to deal with this specter and with the implications for southern identity of the issues raised by Nazism and Fascism. Their responses varied widely, ranging from repression and denial to the repulsion of self-recognition. With penetrating insight, Brinkmeyer examines the work of writers who contemplated the connection between the authoritarianism and racial politics of Nazi Germany and southern culture. He shows how white southern writers -- both those writing cultural criticism and those writing imaginative literature -- turned to Fascist Europe for images, analogies, and metaphors for representing and understanding the conflict between traditional and modern cultures that they were witnessing in Dixie. Brinkmeyer considers the works of a wide range of authors of varying political stripes: the Nashville Agrarians, W. J. Cash, Lillian Smith, William Alexander Percy, Thomas Wolfe, William Faulkner, Katherine Anne Porter, Carson McCullers, Robert Penn Warren, and Lillian Hellman. He argues persuasively that by engaging in their works the vital contemporary debates about totalitarianism and democracy, these writers reconfigured their understanding not only of the South but also of themselves as southerners, and of the nature and significance of their art. The magnum opus of a distinguished scholar, The Fourth Ghost offers a stunning reassessment of the cultural and political orientation of southern literature by examining a major and heretofore unexplored influence on its development.

Strange Fruit

Strange Fruit
Author: Lillian Smith
Publisher:
Total Pages: 250
Release: 1944
Genre:
ISBN:

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In Your Dreams

In Your Dreams
Author: Tom Holt
Publisher: Orbit
Total Pages: 480
Release: 2012-09-04
Genre: Fiction
ISBN: 031623317X

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Ever been offered a promotion that seems too good to be true? The kind where you snap their arm off to accept, then wonder why all your long-serving colleagues look secretly relieved, as if they're off some strange and unpleasant hook? It's the kind of trick that deeply sinister companies like J.W. Wells & Co. pull all the time. Especially with employees who are too busy mooning over the office intern to think about what they're getting into. And it's why, right about now, Paul Carpenter is wishing he'd paid much less attention to the gorgeous Melze, and rather more to a little bit of job description small-print referring to "pest" control.