Francis Butler Simkins
A Life
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University Press of Florida
Published:30th Nov '08
Currently unavailable, our supplier has not provided us a restock date
Few men make their mark in their profession as indelibly as historian Francis Butler Simkins (1897-1966). Known as an eccentric, Simkins is almost as famous for falling asleep while performing his ceremonial duties as president-elect of the Southern Historical Association as he is for his wildly influential and radical scholarship.Simkins was considered one of the most liberal voices in the academic dialogue about Reconstruction and race relations in the South during the first part of his career, but his outlook changed drastically during the 1950s. This man, whose scholarship once challenged racism, became a staunch conservative - arguing in his final book that the Jim Crow South was ""everlasting"" and would never change.In this biography, James Humphreys takes a close look at Simkins as a man, to better understand him as a historian. He engages with Simkins' physical and mental eccentricities - his troubled health and career stresses - and explores the extent to which the historian was shaped by the values he learned during his childhood in segregationist South Carolina.
Humphreys provides us with an important biography of Francis Butler Simkins, one of the most significant and enigmatic pioneers of southern history. In exploring Simkins's ironic contradictions of progressive and traditionalist, especially on race, Humphreys re-creates the life of the intellectual in the twentieth-century South. - Orville Vernon Burton, author of The Age of Lincoln
ISBN: 9780813032658
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 569g
336 pages