300. We
interview Erin Stewart Mauldin about her book,
Unredeemed
Land. "Unredeemed Land is the first book to place the Civil War
and emancipation at the center of the history of southern
agriculture. Mauldin reveals how landscape destruction and
social upheaval intersected with environmental change during
these events, ultimately creating the Cotton
South.
Unredeemed Land is a must-read for anyone
interested in southern history and environmental studies" (Megan
Kate Nelson). — "Trained as an Environmental Historian, my work
explores the intersection of race, economic inequality, and
environment in the 19th-century U.S. South, bridging the
antebellum, Civil War, and Reconstruction periods. I borrow
heavily from the natural sciences, geography, and environmental
sociology to reframe the big questions of nineteenth-century
southern history: slavery as capitalism, the impacts of the
Civil War and emancipation on southern agriculture, economic
stagnation in the shadow of 'King Cotton,' and, more recently,
the twin processes of industrialization and urbanization."
- This week in Louisiana history. February 18, 1699. Iberville
sets out in search of the east fork of the Mississippi River.
- This week in New Orleans history. On February 16, 1840,
Margaret Haughery opened the first of four orphanages.
- This week in Louisiana.
Krewe of Janus Mardi Gras Parade
February 16th, 2019
6:00 pm - 10:00 pm
Streets of Monroe/West Monroe, LA
Trenton St. in West Monroe, Louisville Ave and Downtown
Monroe,
Monroe, LA 71201
318-323-0230
Website
The Krewe of Janus brings a family-friendly, traditional Mardi
Gras Parade with marching units, floats, costumes and throws
to Northeast Louisiana. This is an annual event with an
average of 175,000 in attendance. The parade rolls at 6:00
p.m., starting in downtown West Monroe and crossing the bridge
into Monroe. 2019 will be our 36th year.
- Postcards from Louisiana. Bruce listens to Nathan & the
Zydeco Cha Chas.
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Thank you for uploading this fascinating discussion. It covers many important issues relevant to labor history, politics, and race relations in Louisiana. Though, my family were not farmers, and I don't know anything about soil, so I'm glad I wasn't put in charge of Reconstruction-era economic recovery.
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