“The Plantation System in Southern Life” and Plantation Tourism

Matthew Teutsch
5 min readAug 11, 2022

In his documentary, Lillian Smith: Breaking the Silence, Hal Jacobs uses numerous historical clips. One that stood out to me, though, was a clip, which he showed three sections of, from a ten minute Coronet film entitled “The Plantation System in Southern Life” from 1950. The film presents the South as an idyllic destination, one full of nostalgia and agrarianism, a soothing balm against the trappings of modern society. Throughout, the film paints chattel slavery as some benign class system where the wealthy enslavers had more money and opportunities than the enslaved, basically saying that the enslaved had opportunities but they were poor. There is no discussion of poor whites, free people of color, Native Americans, or others. It’s merely a binary of enslavers and enslaved.

I do not want to completely analyze “The Plantation System in Southern Life” today, but I mention it’s overall narrative to highlight what Jacobs does with the clip in the documentary. The clip follows Rose Gladney talking about white southern womanhood and the place of the white southern woman on the…

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Matthew Teutsch

Here, you will find reflections on African American, American, and Southern Literature, American popular culture and politics, and pedagogy.