Wayne Flynt sketches the geographical
and cultural regions of Alabama in the nineteenth and twentieth
centuries. |
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Part 1 (10:31 min.)
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Distinctive features of Alabama's natural
geography, soil zones, and settlement history, from the Tennessee
Valley in the north to the Wiregrass and Gulf Coast. Illustrated
with maps. |
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Part 2 (8:22 min.)
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An historical-geographical perspective on Alabama's
economy from the antebellum era through the twentieth century.
Yeoman diversity, the plantation, the rise and fall of cotton
monoculture. The emergence of manufacturing and cities. Recent
patterns of "pocket development," agriculture, and re-forestation. For more information on Alabama forestation, visit Susan Pace Hamill's Timber, Equity, and Ethics |
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Part 3 (2:44 min.)
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Importance of sense of place to "Alabamians."
The good and bad of provincialism. |
Part 4 (1:33 min.)
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The failure of Alabama's political leadership. |
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Alabama County Map
Courtesy of the
University of Alabama Department of Geography
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