acclaim for its contribution to infrastructure studies, and it continues to be an important reference for Gulf urban research.
Ramos applied the "Page 99 Test" to his new book, Folk Engineering: Planning Southern Regionalism, with the following results:
Fortunately, page 99 of my book Folk Engineering: Planning Southern Regionalism provides a rich representative sample of its broader claims and concerns. The Southern regionalists were a group of social scientists at the University of North Carolina, who during the interwar years developed the concept of regionalism for the South, and regional planning as its operational practice, to navigate pressures for progress and recalcitrance. Page 99 finds us in the center of the action, beginning, “Myth in the South was nothing new.” The mythos of folk was central to regionalism going back to nineteenth-century European movements, and in the South the regionalists combined myth with social sciences and literature as construct for traditionalism. Page 99 continues: "The 'progressive evolutionism' of turn-of-the-century social sciences, with their faith in those sciences to improve society, was met in the New South with the countervailing force of traditionalism. All regionalists called for balance, but in the South, this balance between progressive and traditional culture and ways of thinking was the one the white elite needed to maintain. The contradiction between these two epistemological approaches is glaring: If the claims of modernity were based on progressive evolutionary assumptions about culture and thought, how best to balance them with Victorian and even earlier modes of traditionalism? How could a balance be struck between Old South and New South? Like William Faulker, Odum believed that the South needed time for its white society to 'go slow' in evolving toward the modern egalitarian cultural demands often viewed as imposed from the North. Against his training in the ameliorative organic social sciences of the early twentieth century, Odum struggled 'to articulate a kind of planning at cross-purposes to time.'”Learn more about Folk Engineering at The University of North Carolina Press website.
Against this apologist, organic view of history at an evolutionary pace, I then quote James Baldwin’s 1956 response, after a lifetime of hearing this position, countering “this pleasant 'go slow' mythology with acerbic skepticism. In response to Faulkner’s assertion that 'emotional' white Southerners would move gradually away from segregation if left on their own time, Baldwin pointed out, 'The question left begging is what, in their history to date, affords any evidence that they have any desire, or capacity to do this. And it is, I suppose, impertinent to ask just what Negroes are supposed to do while the South works out what, in Faulkner’s rhetoric, becomes something very closely resembling a high and noble tragedy.'”
--Marshal Zeringue









