From the late nineteenth century through World War II, popular culture portrayed the American South as a region ensconced in its antebellum past, draped in moonlight and magnolias, and represented by such southern icons as the mammy, the belle, the chivalrous planter, white-columned mansions, and even bolls of cotton.
In Dreaming of Dixie, Karen Cox shows that the chief purveyors of this constructed nostalgia for the Old South were...