New Voyages to Carolina: Reinterpreting North Carolina History
β Scribed by Larry E. Tise
- Publisher
- The University of North Carolina Press
- Year
- 2017
- Tongue
- English
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
New Voyages to Carolina offers a bold new approach for understanding and telling North Carolina's history. Recognizing the need for such a fresh approach and reflecting a generation of recent scholarship, eighteen distinguished authors have sculpted a broad, inclusive narrative of the state's evolution over more than four centuries. The volume provides new lenses and provocative possibilities for reimagining the state's past. Transcending traditional markers of wars and elections, the contributors map out a new chronology encompassing geological realities; the unappreciated presence of Indians, blacks, and women; religious and cultural influences; and abiding preferences for industrial development within the limits of "progressive" politics. While challenging traditional story lines, the authors frame a candid tale of the state's development.
Contributors:
Dorothea V. Ames, East Carolina University
Karl E. Campbell, Appalachian State University
James C. Cobb, University of Georgia
Peter A. Coclanis, University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill
Stephen Feeley, McDaniel College
Jerry Gershenhorn, North Carolina Central University
Glenda Elizabeth Gilmore, Yale University
Patrick Huber, Missouri University of Science and Technology
Charles F. Irons, Elon University
David Moore, Warren Wilson College
Michael Leroy Oberg, State University of New York, College at Geneseo
Stanley R. Riggs, East Carolina University
Richard D. Starnes, Western Carolina University
Carole Watterson Troxler, Elon University
Bradford J. Wood, Eastern Kentucky University
Karin Zipf, East Carolina University
β¦ Subjects
History, Nonfiction, HIS036120
π SIMILAR VOLUMES
This collection of nineteen original essays on selected topics and epochs in North Carolina history offers a broad survey of the state from its discovery and colonization to the present. Each chapter consists of an interpretive essay on a specific aspect of North Carolina's history, a collection of
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