The Deepest South of All: True Stories from Natchez, Mississippi by
Richard Grant
My rating:
3 of 5 stars
These are my thoughts reading through this look at one of the more unique places in America: an Englishman stumbles across an eccentric place and takes advantage of his journalistic observations to write a book.
Then, perhaps it takes someone outside the US to really observe some of the problems with race in this country. It was fascinating how a mixture of denying the reality of the past, as well as the rationality of celebrating only part of our history, can lead to the violence of erasure which is almost as bad as the original sin of slavery. But living in a southern state myself, I can see the same patterns, although maybe to a lesser degree: historical sites down here tend to only focus on the Southern point of view, painting the Union soldiers almost as villains as they invaded forts, burned down cities. And the romancing of plantation wealth without focusing on how they maintained those buildings and landscapes.
Then, Grant seemed hyperfocused on how gay things were--several things were the gayest (gayest loafers, outer-stratosphere of gay, gay as a maypole, gayest man in Missippippi, etc.) , which made me contemplate how we still tend to separate others in categories--race, sex, sexual orientation, country, social class.
In the end, I appreciated a look at some of the extremes observed in Nanchez, which looks ridiculous in the extreme, but exists in lesser amounts elsewhere and Grant does a good job striping back the layers of absurdity to the common humanity that drives this community. I also appreciated the history of Prince that Grant weaves throughout the book--reminding us that those we judge as the least amongst us are unrecognized royalty .
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The problem with divisiveness is that it doesn't lead to prosperity. It holds us back.