The 'Southern
Agrarians' or '
Vanderbilt Agrarians' were a group of 12
American Traditionalist writers and poets from the Southern
United States who joined together to publish the
Agrarian manifesto, a collection of essays entitled ''I'll Take My Stand'' in
1930. They formed an important
conservative branch of American
populism.
Members
The Southern Agrarians included:
★
John Crowe Ransom
★
Donald Davidson
★
Frank Lawrence Owsley
★
John Gould Fletcher
★
Lyle H. Lanier
★
Allen Tate
★
Herman Clarence Nixon
★
Andrew Nelson Lytle
★
Robert Penn Warren
★
John Donald Wade
★
Henry Blue Kline
★
Stark Young
Beliefs
The Agrarians evolved from a philosophical discussion group known as the "
Fugitives" or "Fugitive Poets", whose studies of poetic modernism and of
H. L. Mencken's stinging critique of Southern culture led them to confront the effect of modernity on Southern culture and tradition. The informal leader of the Fugitives and the Agrarians was
John Crowe Ransom, though he formally repudiated agrarianism in a 1945 essay. The most eloquent exponent of the Agrarian philosophy eventually proved to be Ransom's student and Donald Davidson's friend,
Richard M. Weaver. Rather surprisingly, Weaver taught at a Northern institution, the
University of Chicago.
The Agrarians were opposed to unbridled
modernism and
industrialism and bemoaned the loss of traditional Southern culture. Their manifesto was an attack on modern industrial America and posited an alternate direction based on a return to traditional
American values, especially what later was called
republicanism.
Seward Collins, editor of ''
The American Review'', which published some essays by Agrarians in
1933, praised
Benito Mussolini and
Adolf Hitler for thwarting a
communist revolution in Germany.
Allen Tate published a critique of fascism in the 1936 ''
The New Republic'', to distance himself (and the other Agrarians) from Collins.
Robert Penn Warren eventually emerged as the most accomplished of the Agrarians, not only as a major American poet but also as a novelist, especially for his 1946 ''
All the King's Men''. Warren's later political and social views, in particular his espousing of a
liberal political philosophy and his support for
racial integration, set him apart from the
conservatism of the Agrarians.
''I'll Take My Stand'' was originally criticized as a
reactionary and romanticized defense of the
Old South, and viewed as little more than useless
nostalgia. In recent years, scholars such as Carlson, Scotchie, Genovese and others have taken a second look at this book in light of the problems of modern industrial society and its effect on the human condition and the environment.
Today, the Southern Agrarians are lauded regularly in the pro-South ''
Southern Partisan''. Their philosophy has been refined, updated, and lived by scholars such as
Allan C. Carlson and the writer
Wendell Berry. It has been explored in books published by
ISI Books, the book imprint of the
Intercollegiate Studies Institute.
Vanderbilt University
Many of the Southern Agrarians and Fugitive poets were connected to
Vanderbilt University, either as students or as faculty members. Davidson, Lytle, Ransom, Tate, and Warren all attended the university; Davidson and Ransom later joined the faculty, along with Owsley.
Bibliography
★ Bingham, Emily, and Thomas A Underwood, eds., 2001. ''The Southern Agrarians and the New Deal: Essays After I'll Take My Stand''.
★ Carlson, Allan, 2004. ''The New Agrarian Mind: The Movement Toward Decentralist Thought in Twentieth-Century America''.
★ Morton, Clay, 2006. "Southern Orality and 'Typographic America': ''I'll Take My Stand'' Reconsidered" in ''Conflict in Southern Writing''.
★ Murphy, Paul V., 2001. ''The Rebuke of History: The Southern Agrarians and American Conservative Thought''.
★ Scotchie, Joseph, "
Agrarian Valhalla: The Vanderbilt 12 and Beyond," ''Southern Events''.