Regionalism and Local Color Bibliography
Definitions | Local color or regional literature
is fiction and poetry that focuses on the characters, dialect, customs,
topography, and other features particular to a specific region. Influenced
by Southwestern and Down East humor, between the Civil War and the end of the nineteenth
century this mode of writing became dominant in American literature. According
to the Oxford Companion to American Literature, "In local-color
literature one finds the dual influence of romanticism and realism, since
the author frequently looks away from ordinary life to distant lands, strange
customs, or exotic scenes, but retains through minute detail a sense of
fidelity and accuracy of description" (439). Its weaknesses may include
nostalgia or sentimentality. Its customary form is the sketch or short
story, although Hamlin
Garland argued for the novel of local color.
Regional literature incorporates the broader concept of sectional differences, although in Writing Out of Place, Judith Fetterley and Marjorie Pryse have argued convincingly that the distinguishing characteristic that separates "local color" writers from "regional" writers is instead the exploitation of and condescension toward their subjects that the local color writers demonstrate. One definition of the difference between realism and local color is Eric Sundquist's: "Economic or political power can itself be seen to be definitive of a realist aesthetic, in that those in power (say, white urban males) have been more often judged 'realists,' while those removed from the seats of power (say, Midwesterners, blacks, immigrants, or women) have been categorized as regionalists." Many critics, including Amy Kaplan ("Nation, Region, and Empire" in the Columbia History of the American Novel) and Richard Brodhead (Cultures of Letters), have argued that this literary movement contributed to the reunification of the country after the Civil War and to the building of national identity toward the end of the nineteenth century. According to Brodhead, "regionalism's representation of vernacular cultures as enclaves of tradition insulated from larger cultural contact is palpably a fiction . . . its public function was not just to mourn lost cultures but to purvey a certain story of contemporary cultures and of the relations among them" (121). Kaplan adds that local color's "urban middle-class readership . . . was solidified as an imagined community by consuming images of rural 'others' as both a nostalgic point of origin and a measure of cosmopolitan development" with its "separate spaces" serving to erase the "more explosive social conflicts of class, race, and gender made contiguous by urban life" (251). In chronicling the nation's stories about its regions and mythical origins, local color fiction through its presence--and, later, its absence--contributed to the narrative of unified nationhood that late nineteenth-century America sought to construct. More recently, Bill Brown and Brad Evans have called attention to the nature of the aesthetic experience through material culture that regionalism offers. Brown's study of The Country of the Pointed Firs in A Sense of Things (2003) "draw[s] attention to object culture and . . . address[es] the problematic of the significant thing--the set of questions raised by the effort to turn matter into meaning. Jewett's novel . . . is an account comprised, no less, of scenes where people are 'paired' with things in ways that prompt several questions. What ideas are embedded in things? How does the narrator gain access to them? What sort of staging is involved in this object-based epistemology? How does Jewett's fiction dramatize the work involved in determining the value of material objects not in culture but for culture, for an apprehension of culture?" (84). Writing about Howells's The Coast of Bohemia in Before Cultures (2005), Evans disputes the "nostalgia" hypothesis for regionalism and contends that "what one sees in local-color fiction of the 1890s is not at all the assertion of integrated stasis and purity that one might imagine for it--a last gasp, as it were, for a preindustrial past--but the assertion by artists, publishing houses, and perhaps even readers, of a rather hip participation in the dislocating, tangled complexity of the chic. Indeed, by the late 1890s, the status of local color had shifted increasingly toward the aesthetic, just as the objects collected by anthropologists became poised to fuel modernist primitivism" (139). A variation of this genre is the "plantation tradition" fiction of Thomas Nelson Page and others. Much current criticism now reads both 19th- and 20th-century regionalism as always global and cosmopolitan, intricately enmeshed in circuits of trade and diverse cultures in ways that belie its pretense at being "merely" local in conception and subject matter. In addition, many critics now focus on "critical regionalism," a term derived from architecture and associated with Neil Campbell's book The Rhizomatic West (2008). In "Place & Worlding," Krista Comer defines critical regionalism as follows: The concept of critical regionalism imagines political life in the present--it thinks about issues of place, bodies in place, and knowledges derived not only via textuality and discourse, but from place as a critical location, an orientation, and a material structure. Critical regionalism is a way of diagnosing the new configurationsof meaning, time and space occasioned by global restructuring and new technologies--it is a political/cultural imagination and a mode of embodiment whose keywords and ethical domains are under construction. . . . Critical regionalism therefore is not a synonym for transnational analysis but a method of critical or global study attuned both the comparative big picture analyses and linked to the deep local. (156). | ||||||||||||
Characteristics | Setting: The emphasis is frequently on
nature and the limitations it imposes; settings are frequently remote and
inaccessible. The setting is integral to the story and may sometimes become
a character in itself.
Characters: Local color stories tend to be concerned with the character of the district or region rather than with the individual: characters may become character types, sometimes quaint or stereotypical. The characters are marked by their adherence to the old ways, by dialect, and by particular personality traits central to the region. In women's local color fiction, the heroines are often unmarried women or young girls. Narrator: The narrator is typically an educated observer from the world beyond who learns something from the characters while preserving a sometimes sympathetic, sometimes ironic distance from them. The narrator serves as mediator between the rural folk of the tale and the urban audience to whom the tale is directed. Plots. It has been said that "nothing happens" in local color stories by women authors, and often very little does happen. Stories may include lots of storytelling and revolve around the community and its rituals. Themes: Many local color stories share an antipathy to change and a certain degree of nostalgia for an always-past golden age. A celebration of community and acceptance in the face of adversity characterizes women's local color fiction. Thematic tension or conflict between urban ways and old-fashioned rural values is often symbolized by the intrusion of an outsider or interloper who seeks something from the community. In Together by Accident (2009), Stephanie C. Palmer identifies the "motif of the travel accident" as characteristic of local color: it "requires a distressing or surprising event that occurs to a character in transit. It must shift the grounds of sociability in the text, so that the traveling character is obliged to rely on locals to a greater and more humiliating degree. A travel accident challenges a traveler's identity, independence, or power. A travel accident also changes the relationship between the traveling character (who becomes a thwarted traveler) and the implied reader. If an accident occurs, the reader is encouraged to question the character's virtue. In this way, the motif or device also becomes a historical allegory of the different social groups and their competing claims over American space" (11). |
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Practitioners |
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Techniques | Use of dialect to establish credibility and authenticity
of regional characters.
Use of detailed description, especially of small, seemingly insignificant details central to an understanding of the region. Frequent use of a frame story in which the narrator hears some tale of the region. Prominent
African-American writers such as Charles
W. Chesnutt and Frances
E. W. Harper demythologize and satirize portions of the "plantation
tradition" in their works. See especially Chesnutt's "The
Goophered Grapevine," the first story published by an African American
in the Atlantic Monthly Magazine (1887), and the stories in hisThe
Conjure Woman(1899). |
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