Southern Cultures
Southern Cultures is an award-winning, peer-reviewed quarterly of the arts, history, and cultures of the US South, published by UNC Press for the Center for the Study of the American South, where it is housed. Interdisciplinary and art-forward, it is unusual among scholarly journals for also reaching a popular audience.
Contributors include Bancroft, National Book Award, Pulitzer, Peabody, PEN America, James Beard, and Best American Comics winners, as well as leading artists, photographers, and political figures. Southern Cultures has readers around the world in more than 70 countries (and counting).
We welcome submissions from thoughtful writers and artists inside and outside the academy in the forms that we publish: scholarly articles, interviews, photo essays, memoir, poetry, and shorter feature essays. Because we have both a scholarly and informed general readership, we are especially interested in reader-friendly articles and essays that deal with southern topics in a broad and accessible manner while retaining scholarly rigor. For this reason, we strongly recommend that you read Southern Cultures for tone and style before submitting your work. For full submissions guidelines, visit southerncultures.org/about/submit/ .
For questions of style, please consult the Chicago Manual of Style, 17th ed., and follow the Chicago Manual of Style Citation Quick Guide for guidance on formatting endnotes. For spelling and hyphenation, please consult Merriam-Webster's Collegiate Dictionary, 11th ed.
We do not accept simultaneous submissions and ask that you do not submit your work elsewhere while it is under consideration at Southern Cultures.
Southern Cultures, the award-winning, peer-reviewed quarterly from UNC’s Center for the Study of the American South, encourages submissions from scholars, writers, and artists for a special issue, Katrina’s America, to be published Fall 2025. We will accept submissions for this issue through December 16, 2024.
Nearly twenty years ago, Hurricane Katrina sent a storm surge into the Gulf of Mexico. When the levee system surrounding metropolitan New Orleans collapsed, hundreds of people died, tens of thousands of people lost their homes, and years of suffering and struggle followed. At the time, many people understood Katrina as an unprecedented disaster, or a catastrophe that could only occur on the underprivileged margins of American wealth and power. From today’s vantage, however, Katrina no longer looks like an exception. The two decades since the flood have brought more water, fire, and pandemic, surging racist violence, widening economic inequality, and seemingly irreconcilable political conflict. The past two decades have brought, too, emboldened community organizing, ambitious visions for addressing the climate crisis, and other creative efforts to build a more humane future. In all of these domains, Katrina does not appear to be retreating into the past so much as resounding in the future. It is increasingly clear that we live, today, in Katrina’s America.
In the Fall 2025 issue, Southern Cultures explores Katrina as augur and author of the twenty-first century United States. We seek scholarly articles, personal essays, interviews, photography, and art that make sense of Katrina’s significance, and how its meaning has changed over time. We understand Katrina as an acute event that took place in the summer of 2005 in the attics of the Lower Ninth Ward, New Orleans East, Chalmette, and other flooded neighborhoods. We also understand Katrina as an ongoing process that continues on the Gulf Coast, in the places displaced people went, in the halls of power in Baton Rouge and Washington, DC, and in politics and culture across the country and around the world. We are interested in submissions that map Katrina’s America at any or all of these local, national, and global scales. We especially seek submissions that are informed by the time that has passed since the flood.
Submissions can explore any topic or theme, and we welcome investigations of the region in the forms Southern Culturespublishes: scholarly articles, creative nonfiction, memoir (first-person or collective), interviews, surveys, photo and art essays, and shorter feature essays.
Topics and questions to explore might include:
- “where are they now?”
- accounts of contemporary New Orleans, its suburbs, the Alabama and Mississippi coasts, and other flooded places
- evacuation, displacement, resettlement, and the ongoing Katrina diaspora
- gentrification, and the intersection of economic and environmental change
- infrastructure, and the relationships between structural inequality and the built environment
- racism, poverty, and the construction of vulnerability
- the legacy of Katrina among volunteers, Teach for America alumni, and others who spent time in New Orleans after the flood and then left
- Katrina and charter schools, policing, public housing, public health, and other reform movements
- Katrina and disaster policy, insurance policy, water infrastructure, and climate adaptation
- Katrina and George W. Bush’s presidency, Barack Obama’s election, Black Lives Matter, the Confederate Monuments debate, the Green New Deal, the COVID-19 pandemic, and etc.
- Katrina and the ways people experience or imagine race, class, and the climate crisis
- the significance of popular culture in shaping Katrina’s meaning, and responses to Katrina in music and art
- reflections on iconic images of the disaster
- efforts to memorialize Katrina
- Katrina and the meanings of justice and community
As Southern Cultures publishes digital content, we encourage creativity in coordinating print and digital materials in submissions and ask that authors submit any potential video, audio, and interactive visual content along with their essay or artist’s statement. We encourage authors to gain familiarity with the tone, scope, and style of our journal before submitting. For full submissions guidelines, please click here.
Guest Editor: Amanda Martínez (UNC–Chapel Hill)
Southern Cultures, the award-winning, peer-reviewed quarterly from UNC’s Center for the Study of the American South, encourages submissions from scholars, writers, and artists for a special issue, Country Music's Mythology, to be published Winter 2025. We will accept submissions for this issue through February 3, 2025.
The question of what defines country music is as old as the genre itself. Is it a lyric? A sound? A twang? Who listens to country music? Who can call themselves a country artist? Such questions have animated fans, musicians, and scholars alike over the past century.
One feature has always surrounded country music: mythology. Scholar Richard A. Peterson observes that country music is defined by “fabricating authenticity.” As Bill C. Malone, a founder of country music studies, puts it, “Country music is full of songs about little old log cabins that people have never lived in; the old country church that people have never attended.” The genre is as mythologized as the region with which it’s most closely associated, and it remains one of the South’s biggest cultural signifiers.
It is an especially apt moment to reflect on country music’s significance. In tangible ways the genre has never been more popular. Last summer, country songs claimed the top three spots on the Billboard Hot 100 chart for the first time. Pop stars, from Beyoncé and Lana Del Rey to Post Malone, have gone country. Nashville, the home of the country music business and a vacation destination where fans live out the genre’s myths as weekend cowboys, welcomed a record-breaking 16.8 million visitors in 2023. The current country music craze comes as the country music business celebrates a century of steady growth and the adoration of fans worldwide. One of the music’s biggest mythmakers, the Grand Ole Opry—the radio program that continues to sell itself as the “show that made country music famous”—will celebrate its 100th anniversary in 2025.
We call for submissions that reckon with and shed light on how country music’s mythologies have been constructed. The music industry has played perhaps the largest role in crafting country music’s myth. First called hillbilly and old-time music, the genre was invented by record executives in the 1920s as a marketing category associated with rural white southerners. This process of commodification did not reflect a full picture of how people enjoyed music in practice, regardless of race, class, ethnicity, or region, both in and outside of the South. A century-long process of whitewashing in the genre has since obscured a more diverse set of country music innovators and fans who have continually pushed the music forward. A century later, however, country music continues to be superficially tied to a white, rural, and southern identity. How has this myth been upheld?
We welcome critical perspectives that offer new insights into the workings of country music’s myths of the past, present, and possible futures.
Submissions can explore any topic or theme, and we welcome investigations of the region in the forms Southern Culturespublishes: scholarly articles, creative nonfiction, memoir (first-person or collective), interviews, surveys, photo and art essays, and shorter feature essays.
Possible topics and questions to examine might include (but are not limited to):
- The role of industry, for example the Country Music Association, the Grand Ole Opry, advertising and brand endorsements, tourism, etc.
- The impact of these mythologies, especially as it relates to race, class, sexuality, and gender
- How marginalized voices crafted their own narratives. Are there alternate country imaginaries? Ones that are not white or rural; ones that are queer?
- How country music’s mythologies have interacted with other cultural symbols tied to the South, for example college football, NASCAR, food, religion, and fashion
- How country music’s popularity outside of the US South has challenged or reaffirmed mythologized ties to the region
- The role of writers and media in defining what country music is and how it is mythologized; who are the gatekeepers?
As Southern Cultures publishes digital content, we encourage creativity in coordinating print and digital materials in submissions and ask that authors submit any potential video, audio, and interactive visual content along with their essay or artist’s statement. We encourage authors to gain familiarity with the tone, scope, and style of our journal before submitting. For full submissions guidelines, please click here.