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A Defender of Southern Conservatism M. E. Bradford and His Achievements (review)

A Defender of Southern Conservatism M. E. Bradford and His Achievements (review) an attractive volume in The Lines Are Drawn. The reproductions are large and crisp, the layout is clean, and the design is fetching. In short, the book would make a handsome addition to any private library or coffee table and is a great source for instructors looking to plunder it for slides. A Defender of Southern Conservatism M. E. Bradford and His Achievements Edited by Clyde N. Wilson University of Missouri Press, 1 999 208 pp. Cloth, $29.95 Reviewed by Alphonse Vinh of National Public Radio, author of Cleanth Brooks and Allen Tate: The Collected letters, 19)3--1976, from the University of Missouri Press, 1998. The Nashville Agrarian M. E. Bradford once said diat a man could be born a southerner and a conservative but not be a Southern Conservative. Clyde Wilson has gathered essays in A Defender ofSouthern Conservatism diat explain what Bradford meant. The Nashville Agrarians were essentially men of letters. Like many educated southerners of their generation, they were able students of southern history and culture. But it remained for their most brilliant disciple to be, in James McClellan's words, "die first of the Nashville School to make a serious study of the founding documents and http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Southern Cultures University of North Carolina Press

A Defender of Southern Conservatism M. E. Bradford and His Achievements (review)

Southern Cultures , Volume 6 (2) – Jan 4, 2000

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Publisher
University of North Carolina Press
Copyright
Copyright © Center for the Study of the American South.
ISSN
1534-1488
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

an attractive volume in The Lines Are Drawn. The reproductions are large and crisp, the layout is clean, and the design is fetching. In short, the book would make a handsome addition to any private library or coffee table and is a great source for instructors looking to plunder it for slides. A Defender of Southern Conservatism M. E. Bradford and His Achievements Edited by Clyde N. Wilson University of Missouri Press, 1 999 208 pp. Cloth, $29.95 Reviewed by Alphonse Vinh of National Public Radio, author of Cleanth Brooks and Allen Tate: The Collected letters, 19)3--1976, from the University of Missouri Press, 1998. The Nashville Agrarian M. E. Bradford once said diat a man could be born a southerner and a conservative but not be a Southern Conservative. Clyde Wilson has gathered essays in A Defender ofSouthern Conservatism diat explain what Bradford meant. The Nashville Agrarians were essentially men of letters. Like many educated southerners of their generation, they were able students of southern history and culture. But it remained for their most brilliant disciple to be, in James McClellan's words, "die first of the Nashville School to make a serious study of the founding documents and

Journal

Southern CulturesUniversity of North Carolina Press

Published: Jan 4, 2000

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