Alabama and Mississippi are often viewed and depicted as culturally monolithic and hostile to change. Yet, in Magnolia Misfits: Exploring Counterculture in Alabama and Mississippi, author Thomas Michael Kersen proves that, beneath the surface, these states have always contained a vibrant undercurrent of misfits?bohemians, radicals, cooperatives, musicians, and spiritual seekers?who created alternative spaces for civic dialogue and cultural innovation. Building on Kersen?s earlier book, Where Misfits Fit: Counterculture and Influence in the Ozarks, Magnolia Misfits highlights how various social groups function as ?hinges? between everyday lives and larger social forces. These groups generated countersystems of values and practices that resisted conformity while shaping movements for civil rights, women?s rights, antiwar protest, environmentalism, and alternative foodways.
Magnolia Misfits is organized around key case studies: early socialist and cooperative colonies in Mississippi and Alabama; countercultural religious leaders and theosophists; Liberty House and other cooperative networks; Edge City in Jackson as the ?Woodstock Nation of the South?; underground newspapers such as The Kudzu; and food cooperatives and farming movements that prefigured today?s sustainable agriculture. Drawing on archival research, oral histories, and sociological theory, Kersen situates these communities within frameworks utilized in many scholarly works of sociology and folklore?presenting a narrative that is both scholarly and accessible?to radically reframe Southern history that celebrates how countercultural groups have created lasting change in hostile environments.
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Magnolia Misfits: Exploring Counterculture in Alabama and Mississippi
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