Volume 9 (2026)
Unexpected Origins: Mapping Assisted Female Immigrants to New South Wales
Kimberley G. Connor Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2026.01Volume 8 (2025)
Louis XIV's taste as a private matter: A Preliminary Outline of the <em>Appartement du Roi's</em> Iconography
Fabio Gigone Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2025.07Private Birth, Public Authority: Topic Changes from the Sixteenth to the Eighteenth Century in German Midwifery Books
Natacha Klein Käfer Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2025.06Annotating "Privacy" to Train Semi-Supervised Event Extraction Models for Historical Newspapers
Natália da Silva Perez and Nadav Borenstein Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2025.05A Digital Reconstruction of Privacy in the Royal Apartments? Network Theory and the 1585 court ordinance of Henri III of France
Miara Fraikin Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2025.04A Monarch in Motion: Mapping the King's Private Correspondence
Sanne Maekelberg Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2025.03Visualising Art on the Threshold in the Palazzo Medici, Florence
Anna McGee Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2025.02The Republican Party’s Other Right: A Computational History of the Old Right’s Noninterventionism and their Decline within the GOP, 1934-1992
Brandan P. Buck Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2025.01Volume 6 (2023)
Across the Color Line: Using Text Networks to Examine Black and White US Soldiers’ Views on Race and Segregation during World War II
Edward J.K. Gitre, Brandon L. Kramer, Chase Dawson, and Gizem Korkmaz Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2023.01Volume 5 (2022)
Visualizing Generational Change in Early Modern Law Dissertations
Luca Scholz Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2022.01Volume 4 (2021)
Slave Streets, Free Streets: Visualizing the Landscape of Early Baltimore
Anne Sarah Rubin Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2021.01Volume 3 (2020)
A Tale of Three Valleys: Text Mining, Spatial Analysis, and the Contested Geographies of Colorado and New Mexico’s San Luis Valley
Jacob Swisher Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2020.06Silent No More: Women as Significant Political Intermediaries in Ottoman Algeria
Ashley Sanders Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2020.05News Diets: Main Courses and Side Dishes
Vilja Hulden Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2020.04Digitally Mapping Commercial Currents: Maritime Mobility, Vessel Technology, and U.S. Colonization of Puget Sound, 1851–1861
Sean Fraga Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2020.03What’s on History?: Tuning In to Conspiracies, Capitalism, and Masculinity
Joshua Catalano and Briana Pocratsky Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2020.02A Bridge Between Two Worlds: The Political and Economic Geography of SNCC's Friends Network
David S. Busch Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2020.01Volume 2 (2019)
Race and Place: Dialect and the Construction of Southern Identity in the Ex-Slave Narratives
Lauren Tilton Published: DOI: https://doi.org/10.31835/crdh.2019.14In the 1930s, the New Deal provided employment for cultural workers through organizations like the Federal Writers’ Project (FWP). The federal government sent writers across the country to collect life histories, an emerging genre at the intersection of oral history, ethnography, and literature. Among the most prominent and debated are the Ex-Slave Narratives, a collection of over 2,400 life histories with former enslaved peoples. Rather than focusing on the Ex-Slave Narratives as a source for understanding the antebellum era or American south during Reconstruction, this article explores how the writing style of the narratives shaped the construction of race and southern identity in the late 1930s.
Using text analysis, I show how dialect was not only racialized but also connected to a particular (cultural) geography—the American South. I build off of Catherine Stewart’s argument that Ex-Slave Narratives dialect was racialized and often worked to deny interviewees rights to full citizenship by using this powerful representational, rhetorical strategy to “other” formerly enslaved people and therefore deny their full selfhood in the interviews. At the same time, the FWP’s Southern Life Histories Project—which focused on life histories with laborers in the lowest economic strata residing in the South—marked dialect as a regional feature. Dialect, therefore, also signified that the person speaking was rural, uneducated, and Southern. This came at a time when Southern life was under a microscope; the national debate centered around whether the South was the reason the nation struggled to end the Great Depression and progress. Dialect effectively marked a person as poor, black, and southern, leaving those interviewed in the Ex-Slave Narratives representationally on the margins of US society.














































