Here we explore the ongoing repercussions of slavery, observed through the microcosm of Natchez, Mississippi, with Richard Grant, in his fifth book “The Deepest South of All.” Moving from England to Mississippi, Richard brings this distinct perspective and keen, compassionate eye to try to understand the “sleight of mind” that America still maintains about our greatest original sin. In Natchez, he found a town that both studiously maintains its Confederate “Gone with the Wind” mythology but also elected a gay black man for mayor with 91% of the vote. In its time, it was the site of both the second largest slave market in the U.S. and the most millionaires per capita; of course, those two are directly related.
Richard never intended to be a writer; we talk at first about his path from England to becoming a New York Times best-selling author. Then we address the multi-layered, deeply human complexities that enable both slavery and collective forgetfulness, and its ramifications for today. In this moment of Black Lives Matter and an America in perhaps our most disturbing identity crises since the Civil War, Richard’s insights couldn’t be more timely.
Please see the Show Notes for links to Richard and his works, and feel free to comment.
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SHOW NOTES
Richard Grant: Books, Articles, Documentaries and other works
Forks of the Road - one of the largest slave markets in the United States
Fat Possum article in The Guardian
Nick Cave’s Literary Influences
Deacons for Defense and Justice
Abdul-Rahman ibn Ibrahima Sori
Guide to Black-owned businesses
Credits
Transition Music - “Dark was the Night, Cold was the Ground” by Blind Willie Johnson (In Public Domain)
Intro and outro music - The Observatory