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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.

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Guest edited by Elizabeth M. Webb (artist and filmmaker; Duke University and University of North Carolina at 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, Ground, to be published Spring 2027. We will accept submissions for this issue through June 5, 2026, at https://southerncultures.submittable.com/Submit.

This special issue of Southern Cultures engages ground as method. We are seeking projects that think from and with ground (rather than “about” it), offering southern soils as generative ways of knowing.

Ground here is both literal and conceptual. The particular grounds of the South—from dark, fertile soil to delta silt deposited over centuries to sandy coastal plains to red clay that sticks to the soles (or souls)—hold memory, time, and possibility. Ground is always-already in relation: never separate from water, air, what grows, and what decays. Soil texture, described by varying proportions of clay, sand, and silt, is one expression of this interdependence. Clay retains water but drains slowly, sand allows flow but doesn’t cohere, and silt accumulates as evidence of what has moved through. We’re interested in these and other material qualities of ground as openings for thought, practice, rebellion, and form. Ground can be fertile or depleted, stable or shifting, witness or accomplice. We consider southern groundedness—what it is to be grounded in this place, literally and imaginatively—in our relationship to dirt, and welcome visual art, poetry, essays, and creative nonfiction that engage these tensions and possibilities. 

This issue finds roots in Black geographies and Indigenous methodologies, thinking alongside Clyde Woods, Katherine McKittrick, Sylvia Wynter, Tiffany Lethabo King, Mishuana Goeman, and Leanne Betasamosake Simpson, among many others. We are interested in work that contends with complex sedimentary histories of place, thinking South as both a specific location and a site of ongoing spatial struggle. Our understanding of “the South” is expansive, acknowledging the region’s entanglements in histories of settler colonialism, racial capitalism, plantation slavery, and empire that connect it to broader Global South geographies of extraction, displacement, and resistance.  

Possible topics could include but are not limited to:

  • Soil/earth as archive: what ground holds, preserves, or refuses to release
  • Working materially: how ground’s physical properties guide making, thinking, and form
  • Southern dirt; how dirt marks, moves, and makes culture
  • Collaborative practices: art, agriculture, or inquiry that works with rather than extracts from ground 
  • Land-based practices, including mounds and earthworks; contemporary Indigenous land stewardship
  • Renewal and repair: reclamation, regenerative agriculture, and rewilding
  • Contested ground: land as relation or commodity, Indigenous sovereignty, dispossession, extraction, plantation logics
  • Burial grounds and sacred sites: ground as keeper of memory 
  • Erosion and accumulation: what wears away, what deposits, sedimentary layers of place
  • Contaminated ground: toxicity, environmental injustice, what pollutes and persists
  • Ground’s expansive relations: to water systems, foodways, climate, migration, labor, law, and other interconnected processes

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 submission guidelines, please click here.

In preparing your manuscript, please double space and use 12-point Times New Roman font and 1.25-inch margins (left/right). For questions of style, consult the Chicago Manual of Style, 17th ed., and follow the CMoS Quick Guide for guidance on formatting endnotes. For spelling and hyphenation, please consult Merriam-Webster’s Collegiate Dictionary, 11th ed.

All submissions are subject to review by the editors and by external referees and, if accepted, will be copyedited for style, clarity, and soundness of argument. This can take the form of light copyediting or more involved content and organizational editing. We see the copyediting process as dynamic and collaborative, and authors will have an opportunity to respond to the reviewers and to subsequent copyedits. Authors transfer copyright of accepted work to Southern Cultures, although we are pleased to grant authors permission to reprint their essays with acknowledgement upon request. We do our best to respond to submissions within 8 weeks.

Southern Cultures