South Carolina literature

The literature of South Carolina, United States, includes fiction, poetry, and nonfiction. Representative authors include Dorothy Allison, Daniel Payne and William Gilmore Simms.[1][2]

History

A printing press began operating in Charleston in 1731.[3]

Literary figures of the antebellum period included Paul Hamilton Hayne (1830-1886), James Matthews Legaré (1823-1859), William Gilmore Simms (1806-1870), Henry Timrod (1829-1867).[4] The Southern Review was published in Charleston from 1828 through 1832.[5] The Carolina Housewife cookbook was published in Charleston in 1847.[6]

In the 1920s Julia Peterkin (1880-1961) wrote about the Gullah.[7] DuBose Heyward's (1885-1940) 1925 novel Porgy "explored interactions among the black residents of Charleston's Catfish Row."[7]

The South Carolina Review literary journal was founded at Furman University in Greenville in 1968, later moving to Clemson University.[8]

Upstate

The Upstate (or Upcountry) includes the mountains of Oconee and Pickens Counties, the Greenville-Spartanburg metro area, and the many mill communities in the triangle between Charlotte, Columbia, and the Georgia border. The region is best encapsulated by Ben Robertson's memoir Red Hills and Cotton, which describes life in the New South mill culture in the South Carolina "backcountry."

In the late 20th and 21st centuries, literature in this region flourished. Notable books include Dori Sanders' Clover, Dorothy Allison's Bastard Out of Carolina, and the short stories of George Singleton. Oconee, Pickens and Anderson counties have been referred to as the "dark corner," allegedly because it took so long for the region to get electricity.[9] Novelists Ron Rash, Mark Powell and others have explored the region's isolation and history of lawlessness.

The Upstate is also home to a thriving literary arts community, including Spartanburg's Hub City Writers Project.

Lowcountry

The South Carolina Lowcountry includes Charleston, Beaufort, Hilton Head and sea islands. Novelists Dorothea Benton Frank, Josephine Humphreys, and the late Pat Conroy captured the flavor of the Lowcountry, the rhythms of the coast, Charleston's changing society, and the romantic myth of the region. Other notable works from the region include Padgett Powell's novel Edisto.

Organizations

The Poetry Society of South Carolina began in Charleston in 1920.[8] The Spartanburg Hub City Writers Project launched in 1995.[8]

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gollark: Observe, "fractal art".
gollark: For instance, there is now `fractalart-rs`, now that I've fixed it, *and* `calibre-indexer`, from a while ago.
gollark: https://github.com/osmarks/random-stuff ← updates have occurred to this

See also

References

  1. Federal Writers' Project 1941.
  2. Compton 2001.
  3. Lawrence C. Wroth (1938), "Diffusion of Printing", The Colonial Printer, Portland, Maine: Southworth-Anthoensen Press via Internet Archive (Fulltext)
  4. Charles Reagan Wilson; William Ferris, eds. (1989). "Antebellum Era". Encyclopedia of Southern Culture. University of North Carolina Press. ISBN 0807818232 via Documenting the American South.
  5. Richard J. Calhoun (2008). "Periodicals". In M. Thomas Inge (ed.). Literature. New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture. 9. University of North Carolina Press. pp. 107–111. ISBN 9781469616643. OCLC 910189354.
  6. "Introduction", Feeding America: the Historic American Cookbook Project, Michigan State University, retrieved March 13, 2017
  7. Emory Elliott, ed. (1991). Columbia History of the American Novel. Columbia University Press. ISBN 978-0-231-07360-8.
  8. "South Carolina Encyclopedia". University of South Carolina. Retrieved March 20, 2017.
  9. Lockhart, Matthew. "Dark Corner". South Carolina Encyclopedia. Retrieved 29 May 2020.

Bibliography


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