Georgia Voices: Nonfiction

Georgia Voices: Nonfiction
Title Georgia Voices: Nonfiction PDF eBook
Author Hugh Ruppersburg
Publisher
Pages 592
Release 1992
Genre Literary Collections
ISBN 9780820316260

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The second volume of Georgia Voices--a three-volume anthology highlighting the achievements of Georgia writers in fiction, nonfiction, and poetry--is a fascinating collection of essays, letters, diary entries, and speeches. Including selections by African Americans, women, and Native Americans, the anthology reflects the diversity of voices and experiences throughout the history of the state. Spanning more than two and a half centuries--from Georgia's colonial beginnings to the recent decades of social struggle and technological change--the collection explores key themes in southern life as they have unfolded within the context of Georgia's growth and development: the struggle of early settlers against the wilderness; the plight of the Cherokee and the Creek; slavery and emancipation; war and defeat; reconstruction; the struggle toward and against modernity; the civil rights movement; the contemporary South; and the global community. The writings gathered here present a dramatic story--often sad or comic, frequently moving, and on occasion ennobling. Taken together, these writings tell not one story of Georgia but many, sometimes conflicting stories. They are as exciting, heartrending, and vividly striking as any fictional account could be--from the plea by Cherokee Elias Boudinot before the Georgia legislature for his people to be allowed to remain on their native lands to Mary A. H. Gay's remarkable story of her courageous trek through enemy lines on the eve of the fall of Atlanta, from Alice Walker's struggle to understand her regional heritage to humorist Roy Blunt, Jr.'s discourse on the virtues and comic paradoxes of southern life.

Georgia Voices: Poetry

Georgia Voices: Poetry
Title Georgia Voices: Poetry PDF eBook
Author Hugh Ruppersburg
Publisher
Pages 288
Release 1992
Genre Poetry
ISBN 9780820321776

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The final anthology in a distinctive multivolume set of works by Georgia's most gifted writers. Offering selections from thirty-nine poets, Georgia Voices Volume 3 presents a variety of literary and cultural traditions. This work is characteristic of the South's blend of tradition and innovation.

Georgia Voices

Georgia Voices
Title Georgia Voices PDF eBook
Author Hugh Ruppersburg
Publisher Georgia Voices
Pages 0
Release 1992
Genre Fiction
ISBN 9780820314334

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Since the early 19th century, Georgia has produced an impressive number of distinguished fiction writers, from Joel Chandler Harris, Carson McCullers and Flannery O'Connor to such present-day voices as Alice Walker, Ferrol Sams and Pat Conroy. Contains 39 stories and excerpts from novels.

Georgia Voices, Volume 1: Fiction

Georgia Voices, Volume 1: Fiction
Title Georgia Voices, Volume 1: Fiction PDF eBook
Author Hugh Ruppersburg
Publisher
Pages 0
Release 2017-04
Genre
ISBN 9780820352367

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Since the early nineteenth century, Georgia has produced an impressive number of distinguished fiction writers, from Joel Chandler Harris, Sidney Lanier, Flannery O'Connor, and Carson McCullers to such present-day voices as Alice Walker, James Dickey, and Pat Conroy. Containing thirty-nine stories and excerpts from novels, this first volume reveals a literary legacy as rich as any the country has produced. Humorous and tragic, nostalgic and cynical, romantic and realistic, the writings gathered here represent the full range of fiction that has emerged from the state's talented writers. Over the years Georgians have written about the themes and subjects that have inspired writers across history and throughout the world: family, war, hardship, ambition, love, death, change, the search for knowledge and meaning. As Hugh Ruppersburg notes in his introduction, however, the state has provided its writers with a distinct history, culture, and sense of place. Georgia's frontier and agricultural past, its Civil War experience, the rise of its cities and industries and the subsequent decline of rural traditions, and the civil rights movement have all played a part in shaping its distinctive literary landscape. Georgia Voices is a three-volume anthology highlighting the impressive achievements of Georgia writers in fiction, nonfiction, and poetry.

Nonfiction

Nonfiction
Title Nonfiction PDF eBook
Author Hugh M. Ruppersburg
Publisher University of Georgia Press
Pages 593
Release 1994
Genre
ISBN 0820316261

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Georgia Voices

Georgia Voices
Title Georgia Voices PDF eBook
Author Spencer B. King, Jr.
Publisher
Pages
Release 1966-01-01
Genre
ISBN 9780820300788

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Georgia Voices

Georgia Voices
Title Georgia Voices PDF eBook
Author Spencer Bidwell King
Publisher University of Georgia Press
Pages 380
Release 2010-06-01
Genre History
ISBN 0820335401

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Published in 1966, this documentary history examines the history of Georgia from the first appearance of Spanish explorers to the hardships of the Civil War and Reconstruction. Through the accounts of those who experienced the events firsthand, Spencer Bidwell King Jr. allows the reader to experience colonialism, Revolution, and statehood. Within these distinctive eras, King discusses society, education, religion, literature, and the economic and cultural pursuits of the people. He combines extensive quotes from primary sources with historical information to create a continuous narrative. By using the voices of Georgians, King reveals the state's unique character and individuality.