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Web Site Review
Documenting the American South <http://docsouth.unc.edu>.
Created and maintained by the Academic Affairs Library, University of
North Carolina at Chapel Hill. Reviewed Sept. 1520, 2001.
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Documenting the American South (DAS) is a rich archive
of sources on southern history, literature, and culture from the
colonial period (so we are told) through the early twentieth century.
Numerous recollections, images, broadsides, and musical lyrics evoke
the southern perspective on the worlds of the Old and New South.
The various texts are well chosen to amplify the often muted voices
of the past. DAS consists of five projects: "First-Person
Narratives of the American South"; "Library of Southern Literature";
"North American Slave Narratives" (these are printed narratives
of former slaves, not the Federal Writers' Project collection);
"The Southern Homefront, 18611865"; and "The Church in the
Southern Black Community." Each section includes an explanatory
introduction with substantial redundancy of text. In the planning
stage is an addition that will feature "North Caroliniana." DAS
includes 971 books and manuscripts. The archive also contains a
thousand images of currency, manuscript letters, maps, broadsides,
title pages, illustrations, and photographs. Full citations of all
entries are included in bibliographies arranged chronologically
and alphabetically. Thematically, the site focuses upon slavery,
civil war, and African American religion. Scholars guided by an
Editorial Board for Documenting the American South have selected
the texts from the premier southern collections in the library at
the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The Institute of
Museum and Library Services, the National Endowment for the Humanities,
the Gladys Krieble Delmas Foundation, and the Library of Congress/Ameritech
National Digital Library have funded the various projects of the
archive. |
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