Where the New World Is assesses how fiction published since 1980 has resituated the U.S. South globally and how earlier twentieth-century writing already had done so in ways traditional southern literary studies tended to ignore. Martyn Bone argues that this body of fiction has, over the course of some eighty years, challenged received readings and understandings of the U.S. South as a fixed place largely untouched by immigration (or even internal migration) and economic globalization.
The writers discussed by Bone emphasize how migration and labor have reconfigured the...
Where the New World Is assesses how fiction published since 1980 has resituated the U.S. South globally and how earlier twentieth-century wr...