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A Consuming Fire by Eugene D. Genovese
A Consuming Fire by Eugene D. Genovese




A Consuming Fire by Eugene D. Genovese

Wood (Duke) - Weathering the Storm: Inside Winslow Homer’s Gulf Stream 2004 - Michael O’Brien (Cambridge) - Henry Adams and the Southern Question.Cobb (Georgia) - Before and After Brown: Jim Crow, the Brown Decision, and the Changing Face of Southern Identity Fields (Columbia) - Teach About the South (unpublished) 2007 - Richard Gray (Essex) - A Web of Words: The Great Dialogue of Southern Literature.2008 - Anne Goodwyn Jones (Mississippi) - Before and After the War: Formations of Southern Manliness (unpublished).2008 - Paul Harvey (University of Colorado at Colorado Springs) - Moses, Jesus, and the Trickster in the Evangelical South.2009 - Mark Smith (South Carolina) - Histories of a Hurricane: Camille, 1969.2010 - Minrose Gwin (North Carolina) - Remembering Medgar Evers: Aesthetics, Justice, and the Long Civil Rights Movement.2011 - Gary Gallagher (Virginia) - Becoming Confederates: Three Paths to a New National Loyalty.2012 - Michael Kreyling (Vanderbilt) - A Late Encounter with the Civil War.2013 - Daniel Usner (Vanderbilt) - Weaving Alliances with Other Women: American Indian Work in the New South.Andrews (North Carolina) - Class and African American Slave Narrative, 1865-1901 2015 - Patricia Sullivan (South Carolina) - What Happened to the Civil Rights Movement?.Matthews (Boston University) - Hidden in Plain Sight: The Problem of the South in the American Literary Imagination

A Consuming Fire by Eugene D. Genovese

  • 2017 - Jon Wells (Michigan) - Blind No More: Southern Slavery, Free Soil, and the Coming of the Civil War.
  • 2018 - Barbara Ladd (Emory) - The North of the South: The Upper South in Literary History.
  • Sensbach (Florida) - Dream, Tremble, Fly: Slavery and Sacred Experience in the Revolutionary South
  • 2020 – Scott Romine (North Carolina) - The Zombie Memes of Dixie: Exploring how “the South” has Developed in Popular Culture.
  • 2021 – Fitz Brundage (North Carolina) - The Prisoner of War Experience and the American Civil War.
  • Melanie Taylor, professor of English and Native American studies at Dartmouth College, will deliver the 2022 lecture. The University of Georgia Press publishes The Lamar Lecture Series. The series promotes the permanent preservation of Southern culture, history, and literature, and it is recognized as the most important lecture series on Southern history and literature in the United States. The Lamar Lecture series, made possible by the bequest of the late Dorothy Blount Lamar, began in 1957.






    A Consuming Fire by Eugene D. Genovese