Reconfiguring Memories of Honor: William Raoul's Manipulation of Masculinities in the New South, 1872-1918

This dissertation examines how honor was fashioned in the New South by examining the masculine roles performed by William Greene Raoul, Jr. Raoul wrote his autobiography in the mid-1930s and in it he reflected on his life on the New South's frontier at the turn of the century as change came to...

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Main Author: Blankenship, Steve Ray
Format: Others
Published: Digital Archive @ GSU 2007
Subjects:
Online Access:http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/history_diss/3
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1002&context=history_diss
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spelling ndltd-GEORGIA-oai-digitalarchive.gsu.edu-history_diss-10022013-04-23T03:21:04Z Reconfiguring Memories of Honor: William Raoul's Manipulation of Masculinities in the New South, 1872-1918 Blankenship, Steve Ray This dissertation examines how honor was fashioned in the New South by examining the masculine roles performed by William Greene Raoul, Jr. Raoul wrote his autobiography in the mid-1930s and in it he reflected on his life on the New South's frontier at the turn of the century as change came to the region in all aspects of life: politically, economically, socially, sexually, and racially. Raoul was an elite son of the New South whose memoirs, "The Proletarian Aristocrat," reveals a man of multiple masculinities, each with particular ways of retrieving his past(s). The paradox of his title suggests the parallel organization of Raoul's recollections. The "aristocrat" framed the events of a lifetime through a lens of honor, sustained by southern gentlemen who restrained masculine impulses on the one hand and avoided dependency on the other. Raoul the "proletarian" cast honor through an ideological retrospective whereby traumatic memories of disappointment and failure were re-fashioned through a distinctly politicized view constructed rather than recalled. Raoul's business failures led him to re-conceptualize masculine honor as a quality possessed more by the emerging working class than the rising commercial class. Memory operates in this project as more than mere methodology as assumptions about access to the past through memory are subordinated to an examination of the meaning of the memories rehearsed by Raoul. Raoul wrote his autobiography at a bittersweet moment in his life. While his personal fortune had been nearly wiped out by the stock market crash of October 1929, he clearly looked back on his career in the New South as a committed radical with delight as the Great Depression called into question the legitimacy of the capitalist system that he had long held responsible for his own professional failures in a variety of endeavors, from the cotton-mill industry to box-car building and from saw manufacturing to a practicing accountant. Raoul converted to Socialism in part to join what he regarded as society's most progressive and virile force. It is these two voices, the proletarian and the aristocrat, that are under examination here. 2007-04-24 text application/pdf http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/history_diss/3 http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1002&context=history_diss History Dissertations Digital Archive @ GSU Modernity Narrative Autobiography Epistemology Failure Textual Analysis Contraception Prostitution Lynching History of the Self Plantation Unions Greenwich Village Central of Georgia Railroad Memory Construction Business Sharecroppers Cotton Mill Labor Socialism Masculinities Honor Race Class Atlanta New South Gender History
collection NDLTD
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Modernity
Narrative
Autobiography
Epistemology
Failure
Textual Analysis
Contraception
Prostitution
Lynching
History of the Self
Plantation
Unions
Greenwich Village
Central of Georgia Railroad
Memory Construction
Business
Sharecroppers
Cotton Mill
Labor
Socialism
Masculinities
Honor
Race
Class
Atlanta
New South
Gender
History
spellingShingle Modernity
Narrative
Autobiography
Epistemology
Failure
Textual Analysis
Contraception
Prostitution
Lynching
History of the Self
Plantation
Unions
Greenwich Village
Central of Georgia Railroad
Memory Construction
Business
Sharecroppers
Cotton Mill
Labor
Socialism
Masculinities
Honor
Race
Class
Atlanta
New South
Gender
History
Blankenship, Steve Ray
Reconfiguring Memories of Honor: William Raoul's Manipulation of Masculinities in the New South, 1872-1918
description This dissertation examines how honor was fashioned in the New South by examining the masculine roles performed by William Greene Raoul, Jr. Raoul wrote his autobiography in the mid-1930s and in it he reflected on his life on the New South's frontier at the turn of the century as change came to the region in all aspects of life: politically, economically, socially, sexually, and racially. Raoul was an elite son of the New South whose memoirs, "The Proletarian Aristocrat," reveals a man of multiple masculinities, each with particular ways of retrieving his past(s). The paradox of his title suggests the parallel organization of Raoul's recollections. The "aristocrat" framed the events of a lifetime through a lens of honor, sustained by southern gentlemen who restrained masculine impulses on the one hand and avoided dependency on the other. Raoul the "proletarian" cast honor through an ideological retrospective whereby traumatic memories of disappointment and failure were re-fashioned through a distinctly politicized view constructed rather than recalled. Raoul's business failures led him to re-conceptualize masculine honor as a quality possessed more by the emerging working class than the rising commercial class. Memory operates in this project as more than mere methodology as assumptions about access to the past through memory are subordinated to an examination of the meaning of the memories rehearsed by Raoul. Raoul wrote his autobiography at a bittersweet moment in his life. While his personal fortune had been nearly wiped out by the stock market crash of October 1929, he clearly looked back on his career in the New South as a committed radical with delight as the Great Depression called into question the legitimacy of the capitalist system that he had long held responsible for his own professional failures in a variety of endeavors, from the cotton-mill industry to box-car building and from saw manufacturing to a practicing accountant. Raoul converted to Socialism in part to join what he regarded as society's most progressive and virile force. It is these two voices, the proletarian and the aristocrat, that are under examination here.
author Blankenship, Steve Ray
author_facet Blankenship, Steve Ray
author_sort Blankenship, Steve Ray
title Reconfiguring Memories of Honor: William Raoul's Manipulation of Masculinities in the New South, 1872-1918
title_short Reconfiguring Memories of Honor: William Raoul's Manipulation of Masculinities in the New South, 1872-1918
title_full Reconfiguring Memories of Honor: William Raoul's Manipulation of Masculinities in the New South, 1872-1918
title_fullStr Reconfiguring Memories of Honor: William Raoul's Manipulation of Masculinities in the New South, 1872-1918
title_full_unstemmed Reconfiguring Memories of Honor: William Raoul's Manipulation of Masculinities in the New South, 1872-1918
title_sort reconfiguring memories of honor: william raoul's manipulation of masculinities in the new south, 1872-1918
publisher Digital Archive @ GSU
publishDate 2007
url http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/history_diss/3
http://digitalarchive.gsu.edu/cgi/viewcontent.cgi?article=1002&context=history_diss
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