Der amerikanische Süden – The American South

Peter Freese:

Der amerikanische Süden – The American South

Begleitmaterial zum Vortrag

Das Mitglied des DAFK, Professor em. Dr.Dr. h.c. Peter Freese, Universität Paderborn, hielt am 29.1.2009 in den Räumen der VHS vor etwa 60 Zuhörern und Zuhörerinnen einen aufschlussreichen Vortrag über den „Amerikanischen Süden“.

Freese und Broer

Das Publikum

Professor Freese, daneben,
DAFK-Präsident Bernd Broer.
Angeregte Unterhaltung vor dem Vortrag.
Fotos: O. Allendorf

 

The American South

Prof. em. Dr. Dr. h. c. Peter Freese
University of Paderborn
February 2009

1: Defining ‘the South’

Introductory attempts at a geographical definition lead to various answers such as

·        the eleven states of the Confederacy

·        these states plus the ‘border states’ of Kentucky, Maryland and Missouri

·        the ‘modern’ definition which also includes Delaware, West Virginia, Oklahoma, and the District of Columbia

·        the definition used by the U.S. Census (16 states plus Washington, D.C.)

Considerations of the climate and the culture show that there are many climatic and cultural differences within what is loosely called ‘the South’:

[…] the almost tropical Deep South (low country, Gulf Coast) is not quite the same South as the smoky blue hills of Appalachia; tidewater Virginia is not the industrial piedmont; Savannah and Charleston resemble each other more than metropolitan Atlanta; and the Mississippi Delta, pine barrens, and rugged hills have not historically melded into a unit that locates Barry Hannah comfortably across the same literary backyard as Walker Percy. (Doris Betts, “Introduction” to Tonette Bond Inge, ed. Southern Women Writers: The New Generation , pp. 2f.)

‘The South,’ then, is less a precisely definable geographical area than a cultural region of the mind whose contours and characteristics have frequently shifted throughout the course of history.

The commodified image of ‘the South’ as propagated by the media and the tourism industry is somehow

·        situated between the French Quarter in New Orleans and Fort Sumter in Charleston Harbor, between Elvis Presley’s Graceland in Memphis and the Grand Ole Opryin Nashville, Tennessee;

·        contrastively evoked by D. W. Griffith’s enormously influential film Birth of a Nation(1915) glorifying the Ku Klux Klan and Harriet Beecher Stowe’s abolitionist novel Uncle Tom’s Cabin (1852) deploring the crime of slavery; or between Margaret Mitchell’s successfully filmed and frequently continued mega-bestseller Gone with the Wind (1936; film 1939) and Alex Haley’s genealogical novel Roots: The Saga of an American Family(1976) and its popular TV version (1977);

·        characterized by such commodities as catfish and collards, watermelons and mint juleps, hush puppies and chitterlings and by such famous brands as Colonel Sanders’ Kentucky Fried Chicken, Uncle Ben’s Rice, Aunt Jemima Pancake Flour, Southern Comfort, and sundry kinds of famous Kentucky Bourbons;

·        endlessly sung and yodeled about in gospels and blues, hillbilly music, bluegrass rhythms, and rock’n roll; and

·        represented by such diametrically opposite figures as Thomas Jefferson, the drafter of the Declaration of Independence, and John C. Calhoun, the sectionalist champion of state rights and the doctrine of nullification.

Among the major – and contradictory – myths of the South are

·        the (positive) myth of the Old South – <Moonshine and Magnolia> – <The Lost Cause of the Confederacy>

·        the (negative) myth of <the Benighted South> (see H. L. Mencken’s famous essay “The Sahara of the Bozart” [= beaux art] of 1917)

·        the recent myth of <the New South> or <Sunbelt> (in 1969 Kevin Phillips coined the term; in 1976 Kirkpatrick Sale identified a “Southern Rim” of states that were gaining more political power with each postwar census; today the “Sunbelt” is taken to refer to the states or parts of states that lie south of the 37th degree latitude)

With all – conflicting – definitions, however, one has to keep in mind the famous exchange between Quentin Compson and his puzzled Canadian roommate at Harvard in William Faulkner’s Absalom, Absalom!

“We don’t live among defeated grandfathers and freed slaves […] and bullets in the dining room table and such, to be always reminding us to never forget. What is it? something you live and breathe in like air? a kind of vacuum filled with wraithlike and indomitable anger and pride and glory at and in happenings that occurred and ceased fifty years ago? a kind of entailed birthright of father and son and father and son of never forgiving General Sherman, so that forever more as long as your children’s children produce children you won’t be anything but a descendent of a long line of colonels killed in Pickett’s charge at Manassas?”

“Gettysburg. You can’t understand it. You would have to be born there.”

(William Faulkner, Absalom, Absalom! The Corrected Text , p. 289)

2: The Old South

Brief visits to

·        Jamestown (the foundation myth of Captain John Smith and Pocahontas)

·        Charleston (first theater in the US, Beth Elohim Synagogue, bombardment of Fort Sumter)

·        Shirley Plantation (founded in 1613; oldest family-owned business – tobacco – seehttp://www.shirleyplantation.com/timeline.html
for a Shirley timeline, and

http://www.historypoint.org/education/teaching
/history_backyard/tobacco_slavery_virginia_colonies.asp

for information about “Tobacco and Slavery in the Virginia Colony”

·        Middleton Place (founded in 1741 – rice – seehttp://www.middletonplace.org/default.
asp?name=site&catID=4524&parentID=4510
)

·        Boon Hall (founded in 1743 – slave quarters)

·        indigo as a third important (labor-intensive) crop besides tobacco and rice and, later, cotton

(as to literature of the Old South see, e.g., Ben Forkner and Patrick Samway, S.J., eds. Stories of the Old South. New York: Viking Penguin, 1986)

3: The Deep South

·        Jackson, Mississippi

·        the Civil Rights Movement – Jim Crow Laws – Plessy v Ferguson – Brown v Board of Education of Topeka – racism still extant: see the quarrel about a “white only” tree in the yard of the high school in Jena, Louisiana, which, in 2007!, led to nationwide controversies and public outrage (see, e.g., http://www.npr.org/templates/player/mediaPlayer.html?action
=1&t=1&islist=false&id=12353776&m=12357717
)

·        a suitable film: Alan Parker’s Mississippi Burning (1988)

·        Frank Yerby’s short story “The Homecoming” (1946)*

·        Joan Williams’ short story “Spring Is Now” (1968)*

·        Kudzu (pueraria lobata)

·        Oxford, Mississippi – “Ole Miss” – Rowan Oak – William Faulkner’s Yoknapatawpha County (see, e.g., “Faulkner on the Net“ (http://cypress.mcsr.olemiss.edu/~egjbp/faulkner/faulkner.html,
a veritable treasure trove of information)

·        William Faulkner’s short story “A Rose for Emily” (1930)*

·        Poverty – a central document: Let Us Now Praise Famous Men (1941) with texts by James Agee and photographs by Walker Evans

·        Harper LeeTo Kill a Mockingbird (1960) – Monroeville, Alabama

·        The “lynching bee” – Billie Holiday’s song “Strange Fruit” – Lilian Smith’s novel Strange Fruit (1941) – James Baldwin’s story “Going to Meet the Man” (1965) – Erskine Caldwell’s story “Saturday Afternoon” (1936)*

·        The Bible Belt – religious fundamentalism – Southern Baptists – Flannery O’Connor’s story “A Good Man Is Hard to Find” (1953)*

4: The Cajun South

·        New Orleans – the French Quarter – the Garden District – Tennessee Williams’ A Streetcar Named Desire (1947; Elia Kazan’s film 1951) – Anne RiceInterview with the Vampire (1976) – Truman CapoteOther Voices, Other Rooms (1948) – St. Louis No. 1 – Marie Laveau

·        The Bayous – The Great Expulsion (1755) of the Acadians > Cajuns –– food – music – Kate Chopin’s short story “Désirée’s Baby” (1893)* – her novel The Awakening (1899)

·        Oak Alley

·        Houmas House

·        Nottoway/White Castle

·        Oakley Plantation – John James AudubonBirds of America

US-Generalkonsul überreicht Ehrenurkunde an DAFK am 14. Januar 2009

Der amerikanische Generalkonsul in Düsseldorf, Matthew G. Boyse, überreichte am 14.1.2009 ein „Certificate of Appreciation“ an den Deutsch-Amerikanischen Freundeskreis Paderborn-Belleville e.V.

Der Geschäftsführer Dr. Otmar Allendorf nahm das Dokument für den Freundeskreis mit großer Freude entgegen.

US- Botschafter William R. Timken jr. hatte die Urkunden vor seiner Rückkehr in die USA im November als eine seiner letzten Amtshandlungen unterzeichnet.

Mit der Auszeichnung soll der jahrelange Einsatz des Deutsch-Amerikanischen Freundeskreises für die Pflege der freundschaftlichen Beziehungen mit den USA über die Partnerschaft mit der Stadt Belleville/Illinois gewürdigt werden.

Allendorf und Boyse

Ehrenurkunde

In Düsseldorf mit
Generalkonsul Boyse
Certificate of Appreciation
by US Ambassodor Timken
for DAFK Paderborn

Auszug aus der Homepage des Generalkonsulats:

           http://duesseldorf.usconsulate.gov

Der Wert von Netzwerken:

Generalkonsul ehrt Vertreter von Deutsch-Amerikanischen Gesellschaften und Städtepartnerschaften in NRW am 14. Januar 2009.

Bei einem Empfang am 14. Januar in seiner Residenz ehrte Generalkonsul Matt Boyse Vertreter von 23 Städtepartnerschaften, 16 deutsch-amerikanischen Vereinigungen sowie 9 verdiente Persönlichkeiten, die sich für die beiderseitigen Beziehungen engagieren.

Die Gäste aus allen Teilen von Nordrhein-Westfalen erhielten Urkunden, die vom vormaligen Botschafter William Timken und Generalkonsul Boyse unterzeichnet waren.

Der Empfang diente auch dazu, die Zusammenarbeit zwischen dem Konsulat und den Partnerinstitutionen zu intensiveren sowie den Austausch zwischen den Organisationen selbst und ihren Mitgliedern zu fördern. Die Veranstaltung war Auftakt einer Reihe von Seminaren, die regelmäßig durchgeführt werden sollen, damit sich alle deutsch-amerikanischen Organisationen besser gegenseitig unterstützen und Synergien schaffen können.

Schüleraustausch zwischen den Partnerstädten Paderborn und Belleville/Illinois 2009

90 Tage USA

Schüleraustausch zwischen den Partnerstädten Paderborn und Belleville/Illinois 2009

Der Deutsch-Amerikanische Freundeskreis Paderborn-Belleville e.V. bietet einigen Paderborner Schülern/Schülerinnen, die ab Herbst 2009 in die Klasse 11 kommen, die Möglichkeit an einem interessanten ca. 90-tägigen Aufenthalt als Schüler an einer amerikanischen High-School in Belleville/Illinois, teilzunehmen.

Die Gruppe verlässt Paderborn Mitte August 2009 und fliegt nach St. Louis. Von dort erfolgt dann ein kurzer Transfer nach Belleville mit dem anschließenden Kennenlernen der Gasteltern.

Das Einschreiben an der jeweiligen High School und die Platzierung in die gewünschten Klassen und Kurse geschieht dann in den folgenden Tagen.

Aktive Unterrichtsbesuche an fünf Werktagen, in der Regel bis in den Nachmittag. Lunch in der Schule.

Die Wochenenden können kreativ gemeinsam mit den Gasteltern, Freunden oder auch als Gruppe gestaltet werden.

Rückflug von St. Louis nach Paderborn nach ca. 90 Tagen Mitte November.

Erlebnisberichte (blogs) der Schüler/innen vom Austausch 2008 findest Du unter:
www.dakf-paderborn.de, gehe zu Archiv, Schüleraustausch, dort sind auch die High-School Webseiten von Belleville East und West verlinkt. Fotos vom Austausch: gehe zu Fotogalerie 2008.

Die Kosten: Pro Teilnehmer werden es für die obigen Leistungen einschl. der Versicherung ca. 1.900,00 € plus Taschengeld sein (der Betrag hängt von den aktuellen Flugpreisen ab).

Vorbedingung für eine erfolgreiche Teilnahme sind gute Englischkenntnisse zum Verstehen und Einbringen in den jeweiligen Unterricht, die Bereitschaft einen amerikanischen High School Schüler bei sich für ca. 8 Wochen im folgenden Jahr im Gegenaustausch aufzunehmen und die positive Fähigkeit, sich an die ortsüblichen Gegebenheiten schnell anzupassen.

Eine wichtige Voraussetzung ist natürlich das Einverständnis der Schule, das nach dem Abschluss des Auswahlverfahrens einzuholen ist.

!Abgabe der Bewerbungsunterlagen bis zum 28.02.2009!

Über die Auswahl entscheidet der DAFK-Vorstand.

Der Freundeskreis Paderborn-Belleville möchte Dich als jungen Menschen ansprechen und Dich für eine aktive und gelebte Städtepartnerschaft motivieren. Bitte sprich mit Deinen Eltern und Freunden über dieses Projekt und bewirb Dich möglichst bald, denn die Zahl der angebotenen Plätze ist leider sehr stark begrenzt.

Bei Fragen stehen der Präsident des DAFK, Bernd Broer und Geschäftsführer Dr. Otmar Allendorf (05252-7128) zur Verfügung.

Schüleraustausch zwischen den Partnerstädten Paderborn und Belleville/Illinois 2008

90 Tage USA

Schüleraustausch zwischen den Partnerstädten Paderborn und Belleville/Illinois 2008

Der Deutsch-Amerikanische Freundeskreis Paderborn-Belleville e.V. bietet einigen Paderborner Schülern/Schülerinnen, die ab Herbst 2008 in die Klasse 11 kommen, die Möglichkeit an einem interessanten ca. 90-tägigen Aufenthalt als Schüler an einer amerikanischen High-School in Belleville/Illinois, teilzunehmen.

Die Gruppe verlässt Paderborn Mitte August 2008 und fliegt über Chicago nach St. Louis. Von dort erfolgt dann ein kurzer Transfer nach Belleville mit dem anschließenden Kennenlernen der Gasteltern.

 

Die Schüler/innen schreiben im Internet über ihre Eindrücke:

Daniel Schmidt High School Belleville West

http://www.bths201.org/west/
http://daniel-amerika.blogspot.com/

Christian Stemberg High School Belleville West

http://www.bths201.org/west/
http://stemberg-belleville.blogspot.com/

Eva Wallaschek High School Belleville East

http://evamon.blogspot.com/
http://www.bths201.org/east/


Pressebericht zum High School Austausch 2008

Aus dem Mitteilungsblatt von Belleville Sister Cities Inc. November 2008

Grußworte der Präsidenten

President’s Message
The summer has gone by fast with all the events that took place the past few months. Our summer exchange students left here July 11th , spending three weeks with their hosts in Paderborn, attending the Libori fest and traveling to Berlin and Koln.

Upon returning some of the students attended our August gen- eral meeting telling us what a great time they had in Germany with their hosts and sightseeing.

A delegation of 22 BSC members traveled to Paderborn July 25 thru 29th for the 20th anniversary of the DAFK celebration. Mayor Mark Eckert, his wife, Rita, and three children accompanied us on the trip. We were given a warm welcome on Friday night by President Bernd Broer, Landrat Manfred Mueller and members of the DAFK and at Kloster Dalheim. Saturday, we attended the Libori fest with Burgermeister Heinz Paus, who tapped the keg at the festhall. A reception at the Rathaus in honor of DAFK’s 20th anniversary was held on Monday. Dr. Allendorf gave a presentation with pictures of the past 20 years. Later that evening we dined at Das Gastliche Dorf for the farewell dinner. Tuesday, we bid our friends farewell. Our time in Paderborn was memorable…

making new friends, greeting old friends and visiting with friends we had not seen in years. Twenty years of friendship, this is what Sister Cities is all about!

On Aug. 15th six students from Paderborn arrived for the 90 day exchange. A welcome reception was held at the Sundowner Swim Club with hosts and board members. Thanks to Marie Reichling, her daughter and Doris Roach for getting everyone together.

We had our very first policeman exchange Sept 19th thru Sept 23rd . Six officers and three of their wives came. Saturday, the officers, wives, hosts and 90 day students were guests at the Scott Air Force Base air- show. The performance by the Air Force Thunderbirds was outstanding. On Sunday, the group toured the St. Louis Arch and Anheuser Brewery . That evening Mayor Eckert and Rita welcomed everyone to their home for dinner. Monday began at City Hall with breakfast followed by tours of the county jail, city hall and jail, and the county courthouse. Lunch was at Eckert’s Restaurant where Police Chief Clay was presented with a uniform of the Paderborn Police. A short tour of downtown Belleville followed. Monday evening Sully & Jackie Sullivan opened their bar and patio for the farewell dinner hosted by Bob & Ruth Fritz. By the conver- sation that evening, I think everyone had a great time over the weekend, making new friends and looking for- ward to seeing each other again. I would like to thank everyone that helped make this exchange a success— Mayor Mark Eckert & Rita, Chief William Clay, the Belleville Police Dept., Bob & Ruth Fritz, Norma Bergkoetter, Doris Roach (who served as translator for the weekend); and especially the hosts—Dennis Bielke, Officer Steve & Stephanie Britt, Robert & Julia Cole, and Bill & Cindy Wetzig.

The following weekend everyone pitched in for the Oktoberfest. With weather that was perfect and a hard working crew, we pulled off another winning year. The final results will be in soon. Many thanks again to all the many volunteers who worked a shift or, in some cases, worked all day. Food chairman, Doris Roach and Beer Chairman, Larry Schaltenbrand—great job!

This year’s Taste of Germany dinner was a great success. Many commented on the delicious food and wonderful entertainment from Rothenbach, Germany. Many thanks to Rich Berkel, chairman of the dinner, Herm Schoener, ad chairman and all those members who devoted their time and hard work to make this a suc- cess, also a special thanks to Robert ‘’Chick ‘’Fritz Inc. who donated a Warsteiner beer glass and coaster to each attendee. This year’s Hermann Award was presented to Mayor Eckert and the city of Belleville for out- standing support of Belleville Sister Cities and BSC programs. The membership award went to John Roach for his dedication, hard work and support of BSC. Congratulations to both!

Our next project will be a float in the Christmas Parade on Friday Nov. 28th starting at 10:00AM. Anyone with ideas for a float or willing to help, contact me at 235-3795.

To all our members and their families, Happy Thanksgiving, Merry Christmas and Happy New Year.

Ron Fritz,
President

News from Paderborn
Looking back at last summer we are proud to focus on several exchanges between our two cities and regions. Belleville students were in Paderborn in July (see Newsletter of August), a delegation from Belleville came to Paderborn to attend the 20th anniversary of DAFK on July 28th , six high school students stayed in Belleville for three months (August-November) and a group of policemen and their partners visited Belleville in September.

The 23 person delegation from Belleville, including Mayor Mark Eckert and BSC Presi- dent Ron Fritz, arrived on July 25th and left Paderborn on the 29th . Besides the Libori Festival which the group attended, the biggest highlight of their stay was the celebration of the 20th anniversary of DAFK on July 28th at the City Hall. DAFK made Mayor Eckert, Paderborn’s Mayor Paus and Rich Berkel Honorary Members. The visit was a wonderful time for the hosts and we hope for the guests as well. Mayor Eckert and his family stayed longer in Paderborn, in part to attend an official meeting of Paderborn’s six sister cities on August 2nd and 3rd.

Six police officers from Paderborn and three partners visited Belleville from September 19th thru 23rd . Landrat Man- fred Mueller and Mayor Eckert had prepared this visit while the Mayor was in Paderborn. Arriving at St Louis Lam- bert Airport on Friday, the group headed by Manfred Greitemeyer was warmly welcomed by their hosts. During the next days Mayor Mark Eckert, Police Chief William Clay and his colleagues as well as President Ron Fritz of BSC and Sheriff Justus and Major McLaurin of the County’s Sheriff’s Dept. showed them around, informing them about the City and how Belleville Police and County Jail operate. Their visit also included tours to Scott Air Force Base, the St. Louis Arch, the Anheuser Busch Brewery and Eckert’s Farm. During the official function at the City Hall the German policemen also wore their uniforms.

The policemen and their partners returned home (after a stay in New York City) enriched and with wonderful memo- ries, they talked with enthusiasm about the hospitality they experienced in Belleville. They are now looking forward to welcoming their Belleville colleagues for a counter visit to Paderborn. On behalf of DAFK we also want express our warm thanks to everybody involved!

One of the exchange students from Belleville this summer, Kyle Pointer wrote in his blog of July 23rd , “I’m going to regret having to go home. There’s a lot of stuff over here that I have really come to appreciate. … But I do miss my friends, and I do miss colloquial English (who wouldn’t?). I also miss drumline and band.”

And when he was home he wrote: “Now all I need to do is find out how I can become an English teacher in Ger- many… which is essentially what I want to do with my life… either that or be an airplane pilot. I’m not quite sure yet, but I think I’m finally deciding what I want to do with the rest of my life, and I think I’d like to keep German involved. Thank You Frau” (26.08.08). We think with “Frau” he means his English teacher. Isn’t this a statement a teacher can be proud of? From August 15th thru November 8th six students from Paderborn had a wonderful 3-month stay in Belleville. Three attended Belleville West High School, Lea Mischendahl (staying with Family Davis), Daniel Schmidt (Nick Stauder), Christian Stemberg (Ms. Robin Dronen) and three were at Belleville East, Maren Ruerup (Amanda Reichling), Eva Wallaschek (Victoria Francis), Simon Potthast (Jonathan Crawford).

Eva Wallaschek, one of the six exchange students from Paderborn, wrote in her blog (October 18th , three weeks be- fore the end of her stay), “Those were the best days of my life.” We have the impression from what we have heard from the other five students that they would easily agree with that statement. Our thanks go to the principals of the schools, the teachers , the students and host families, to the board of BSC and to Doris Roach, chairwoman of the Youth Exchange Committee.

This summer Linda Stephan stayed with two families for six weeks, Family Hutchinson (Columbia) and Family Welge (Highland), her comment, “Both families made me feel at home and welcome. They allowed me to experience America. I am so happy and pleased that I got the honour to meet them.” Our thanks go to Mac Chamblin of the Itty Bitty Theatre Group in Belleville who helped to arrange this stay.

We think that such exchanges have a deep impact on forming the character of young people that are involved on both sides.

On October 26th we welcomed two Belleville area residents working for Boeing Corporation in St. Louis: Scott Martin and Mike Hayes. Boeing is one of the partners in the Direct Manufacturing Research Center (DMRC) at the University of Paderborn.

We congratulate Mayor Eckert on being honored with BSC’s “Hermann Award” and John Roach receiving BSC’s “Membership Award” during this year’s TOG.

Sincerely,

Bernd Broer
President

Dr. Otmar Allendorf
Secretary