1989
DOI: 10.2307/215595
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Cracker Culture: Celtic Ways in the Old South

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Cited by 6 publications
(42 citation statements)
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“…Some scholars have attributed this "Southern culture of violence" to 18 th and 19 th century emigration from the Scottish Lowlands and Northern England to the Carolinas, Appalachia, and across the South. These scholars argue that such migrants brought with them a unique culture where socialization processes condone violence and killing as an honorable retaliatory response to threats against family and property (McWhiney, 1988;Webb, 2005). For several decades, researchers have argued that being raised or residing in the South is a stronger predictor than poverty of being involved in a violent crime (Gastil, 1971;Hackney, 1969), particularly in rural areas (Ayers, 1991).…”
Section: Rural Southern Women's Prisons In Historical Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Some scholars have attributed this "Southern culture of violence" to 18 th and 19 th century emigration from the Scottish Lowlands and Northern England to the Carolinas, Appalachia, and across the South. These scholars argue that such migrants brought with them a unique culture where socialization processes condone violence and killing as an honorable retaliatory response to threats against family and property (McWhiney, 1988;Webb, 2005). For several decades, researchers have argued that being raised or residing in the South is a stronger predictor than poverty of being involved in a violent crime (Gastil, 1971;Hackney, 1969), particularly in rural areas (Ayers, 1991).…”
Section: Rural Southern Women's Prisons In Historical Contextmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Audubon,Mississippi River Journal,[6][7]Audubon,Ornithological Biography,195, Skiff and Went to the Mouth of the Ohio, and round the point up the Mississippi … I bid my Farewell to the Ohio at 2 o'clock." 13 From its Lake Itasca source, the upper Mississippi River Valley differs in some respects from the Great Valley around and below Saint Louis, where the Mississippi is joined by the Missouri, Illinois, and Ohio Rivers. The upper Mississippi Valley still bears dramatic remnants of its glacial beginnings.…”
Section: Prologmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They were expert fishermen, harvesting the nutrient-rich catfish and bottom feeders of the Mississippi and its tributaries; probably half their calories came from fish and waterfowl. 13 The Mississippians' primary social and political organization was the chiefdom. Chiefs were hereditary rulers who lived atop their village's highest mound.…”
Section: The Antebellum Valleymentioning
confidence: 99%
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