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Old 01-23-2014, 08:36 PM
 
Location: A subtropical paradise
2,068 posts, read 2,921,505 times
Reputation: 1359

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Quote:
Originally Posted by TexasReb View Post
LOL Ynoh?

I have read so many posts of yours and you seem to have an AMAZING capacity to contradict your own previous posts!

Do you HONESTLY believe -- just as starters -- that Maryland and Delaware are "more Southern" -- whatever one means by that as to criteria -- than Texas and Oklahoma? This is just flat out laughable. Unless, of course, you are just trying to get a reaction and attention from someone!

But ok, to be fair? Please state your rationale for this opinion.
Whatever is along and east of the Mississippi River stays in those locations. Texas's unique culture (found nowhere else in the country) may be southern, but I consider the culture to be less Southern than that of anywhere along, or east of the Mississippi. Look across Texas, and you will see all sorts of huge mega metropolises like that of Houston, a futuristic energy dynamo, and Dallas, with its strong information industry. Austin is the perceived liberal college town of Texas that also has an emerging tech industry. Then you have Tejano culture in full force in San Antonio and the rest of South Texas. Oklahoma has its midwestern plains vibe, different from the South.
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Old 01-23-2014, 08:36 PM
 
Location: Appalachian New York, Formerly Louisiana
4,409 posts, read 6,536,583 times
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Quote:
Originally Posted by David_J View Post
I'd put Delaware and Maryland a little higher, as well as Louisiana (due to New Orleans' unique culture). NoVA imo belongs just below Maryland but above South Florida.
That's NEW ORLEANS.

NOT LOUISIANA.

Have you been to this state outside of New orleans? Are you also one of those people who bases the entirety of New York on NYC and the entirety of California on Los Angeles/San Francisco and the entirety of New England on Connecticut or Boston?

New Orleans is a tiny fraction of Louisiana. It is not even the dominant culture of southeast Louisiana. As soon as you leave the metro area this state changes radically.

If you think the whole state of Louisiana is not southern because of one city, you are, frankly, too uneducated on the subject to make a valid statement.
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Old 01-23-2014, 08:43 PM
 
Location: Appalachian New York, Formerly Louisiana
4,409 posts, read 6,536,583 times
Reputation: 6253
Quote:
Originally Posted by Yn0hTnA View Post
Whatever is along and east of the Mississippi River stays in those locations. Texas's unique culture (found nowhere else in the country) may be southern, but I consider the culture to be less Southern than that of anywhere along, or east of the Mississippi. Look across Texas, and you will see all sorts of huge mega metropolises like that of Houston, a futuristic energy dynamo, and Dallas, with its strong information industry. Austin is the perceived liberal college town of Texas that also has an emerging tech industry. Then you have Tejano culture in full force in San Antonio and the rest of South Texas. Oklahoma has its midwestern plains vibe, different from the South.
Texas is enormous. Of course there will be multiple cities. But have you seen what lies between them? I've been out as far as San Antonio, it's southern. No ifs, ands or buts. You ask me to find a difference between rural Tennessee and rural east Texas and I would say, "just hills". The people are the same.

Oklahoma is not entirely plains. The eastern third of it is hilly/mountainous like Arkansas. Most of the white population is settled from Arkansas and Tennessee. Oklahoma has southern culture, richly in the east.
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Old 01-23-2014, 08:44 PM
 
Location: A subtropical paradise
2,068 posts, read 2,921,505 times
Reputation: 1359
Quote:
Originally Posted by CookieSkoon View Post
Did you really just put West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, and NoVa above Texas and Oklahoma?

Have you ever been to TX and OK? Evidently not.

Also What is so "not southern" about South Louisiana exactly? It's not all New Orleans you know.
Texas and Oklahoma both have a western aura that dilutes the "southerness." Oklahoma also has the added Great Plains/Midwest vibe, while Texas has the strong Texan/Tejano culture with multiple megametropolises, from the hyper-advanced energy dynamo Houston to the "Seattle-like" Austin. Therefore, Texas and Oklahoma are the least Southern of the "Southern states" in my opinion. Texas and Oklahoma are the ONLY states in the South that stretch to the American west, where arid/semi-arid climates reign.
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Old 01-23-2014, 08:47 PM
 
Location: Appalachian New York, Formerly Louisiana
4,409 posts, read 6,536,583 times
Reputation: 6253
Quote:
Originally Posted by Yn0hTnA View Post
Texas and Oklahoma both have a western aura that dilutes the "southerness." Oklahoma also has the added Great Plains/Midwest vibe, while Texas has the strong Texan/Tejano culture with multiple megametropolises, from the hyper-advanced energy dynamo Houston to the "Seattle-like" Austin. Therefore, Texas and Oklahoma are the least Southern of the "Southern states" in my opinion. Texas and Oklahoma are the ONLY states in the South that stretch to the American west, where arid/semi-arid climates reign.
That "western aura" is only in the western portions of the state.

Of course you will find Mexican influence along the Mexican border. South France isn't Spain, North Japan isn't Russia, south Texas isn't Mexico.
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Old 01-23-2014, 08:48 PM
 
Location: A subtropical paradise
2,068 posts, read 2,921,505 times
Reputation: 1359
Quote:
Originally Posted by CookieSkoon View Post
Texas is enormous. Of course there will be multiple cities. But have you seen what lies between them? I've been out as far as San Antonio, it's southern. No ifs, ands or buts. You ask me to find a difference between rural Tennessee and rural east Texas and I would say, "just hills". The people are the same.

Oklahoma is not entirely plains. The eastern third of it is hilly/mountainous like Arkansas. Most of the white population is settled from Arkansas and Tennessee. Oklahoma has southern culture, richly in the east.
Yes, in between the Texas cities are enclaves that exhibit a uniquely Texan culture. San Antonio is when you start entering the Southwest, so there goes that. Even in Deep rural East Texas, you still have the western vibe, unlike in Tennessee.
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Old 01-23-2014, 08:51 PM
 
Location: A subtropical paradise
2,068 posts, read 2,921,505 times
Reputation: 1359
Quote:
Originally Posted by CookieSkoon View Post
That "western aura" is only in the western portions of the state.

Of course you will find Mexican influence along the Mexican border. South France isn't Spain, North Japan isn't Russia, south Texas isn't Mexico.
The western "aura" actually stretches as far east as Beaumont, but it is more apparent by the time you reach Houston, which hosts the world's largest Rodeo, an action that developed in the west.
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Old 01-23-2014, 11:59 PM
 
Location: OKIE-Ville
5,546 posts, read 9,499,375 times
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While I understand what YnOhTnA is getting at with Oklahoma's and Texas' frontier vibe (there is some Western Frontier vibe resident to an extent, both states are still solidly Southern in the main when OK/TX are taken in the their totality.

As usual, CookieSkoon & TexasReb are spot on in this discussion. Along with the settlement patterns of OK/TX alluded to by CookieSkoon (vast majority were Southerners) the speech patterns, religious norms (Oklahoma is almost a 1/3 Southern Baptist!....just behind Bama and Mississippi I believe given the population), food choices and customs (Pecan Pie and Sweet Tea anyone?), crazed college football culture, and overall feel and culture, it's impossible to deny the Southern tendencies of both of these great states. Are they different from other Southern states? Sure. However, it can easily be argued that every Southern state is different from every other Southern state. As has been shown in these threads over and over, there is no one monolithic Southern culture throughout the South: from Oklahoma and Texas to Tennessee to Mississippi to Alabama/Georgia and all the way up to Richmond.

The Southern culture of either state is not as diluted (Virginia or Florida anyone?) as YnOhTnA indicates, especially when one gets out of the cosmopolitan areas. This is especially true of Oklahoma which only has two decent/average sized cities. While Southern culture can be felt in OK City and Tulsa, outside of these cities the Southerness is overt. As for Texas, East Texas is an extension of the Deep South. A Deep South Purist would feel at home in many portions of East Texas. Huge portions of the rest of Texas retain Southern semblances as well.

Also, neither Oklahoma or Texas are Midwestern in the classic sense of the term. Just because small portions of these states fall in the High Plains (primarily the panhandles), it does not indicate that the culture of these states is any less Southern. There is a Regional Identity thread over on the Oklahoma forum that clearly shows that the vast majority of people who voted (I'm sure many to most were Okies) do not see Oklahoma as part of the Midwest but part of the South and Southwest. When combining the voting totals of the South/Southwest the percentage was somewhere around 80% on regional identification/designation. The Midwest tag just doesn't hold any water when applied to Oklahoma.

*Maryland/Delaware are the only states which the Census gets blatantly wrong in it's breakdown of regional affiliation/designation.
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Old 01-24-2014, 12:47 AM
 
Location: Appalachian New York, Formerly Louisiana
4,409 posts, read 6,536,583 times
Reputation: 6253
Quote:
Originally Posted by Yn0hTnA View Post
The western "aura" actually stretches as far east as Beaumont, but it is more apparent by the time you reach Houston, which hosts the world's largest Rodeo, an action that developed in the west.
...

If Beaumont Texas is western then so is Baton Rouge.

Beaumont is nothing like the west. You look at Arizona and then tell me that Beaumont, TX, a town that is in Louisiana like swampland, has southern customs, and is near Louisiana itself, is western. If you can honestly do that, you're insane.
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Old 01-24-2014, 03:44 AM
 
10,239 posts, read 19,598,982 times
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Quote:
=Yn0hTnA;33154650]Texas and Oklahoma both have a western aura that dilutes the "southerness."
Only if one considers southeast to be synonymous with South. And it is NOT western (in the sense of having more culturally and historically in common with Colorado or Arizona than Tennessee or Alabama). If you disagree? Then present the evidence otherwise. Texas and Oklahoma are "western South" and the "western" part comes in that it was/is the western extension of the South itself, just in the same way, in an earlier era, Alabama and Tennessee were considered "Southwest".

Does the same frontier era aspect dilute Kansas' "Midwesterness" to the point that it has more in common with Wyoming than with Iowa?

So again, tell why you disagree with my counter points...?

Quote:
Oklahoma also has the added Great Plains/Midwest vibe, while Texas has the strong Texan/Tejano culture with multiple megametropolises, from the hyper-advanced energy dynamo Houston to the "Seattle-like" Austin.
Soooo? Louisiana has a strong French-Canadian culture (known as Cajun). And in south Florida, the same phenomenon is beyond question (although in this case it is mostly Cuban).

Yes, there are demographic changes going on in large urban areas of Texas...but they are relatively recent and none are remotely strong enough to overcome the absolute domination of Southern influence in the vast majority of the state; which are those my friend Bass&Catfish spelled out above, and which have been repeatedly laid out before. (i.e. settlement patterns, linguistics, religious affiliation, etc).

And not only no telling how much is either illegal (Hispanic) or the result of northern and western migration for jobs only, but that all that could change in a heartbeat, dependent on immigration policies or a radical change in the economy. On the other hand? The solidly entrenched and unchanging/inalterable fact is the permanence of the anglo/black duality... which came from the southeast.

This is a factor that -- while not always hunky-dory in lots of ways -- not only bonds Texas to the South, but totally separates it from the West (as defined by the Census Bureau). A sort of double-duality if you will.

To elaborate? In not a single truly Western state do blacks make up anything at all as in a significant population. And in those areas where they do? Well, it is almost exclusively confined to inner city areas in large west coast cities (especially Los Angeles...)
On the other hand? Texas has

By contrast? While there is a large black population as well in large Texas cities? It is almost always in neighborhoods that have developed a particular Southern feel and culture. And perhaps even more to the point? Unlike any state in the West, there is a large property-owning, rural, and solidly native (from generations back), that bonds them to the soil history/culture of Texas/South, in a way that not only helped shape it, but still exists.

I hasten to add, PLEASE don't think I presume to speak for African Americans, anymore than I presume to speak for all white Texans. I am just saying this factor is a STRONG one, when it comes to placing Texas in a region...

Quote:
Therefore, Texas and Oklahoma are the least Southern of the "Southern states" in my opinion. Texas and Oklahoma are the ONLY states in the South that stretch to the American west, where arid/semi-arid climates reign.
Yes, Climatically speaking, west of the 100th Meridan, Texas (and Oklahoma) are generally more akin to the true Southwest (e.g. New Mexico and Arizona) than with the southeastern states. Just as climatically speaking, Kentucky and Virginia have more in common, respectively with Ohio and Pennsylvania. But that is not much of the state. The eastern two/thirds of Texas are either sub-humid, sub-tropical, or humid-subtropical. Here is a link and an excerpt:

The eastern two-thirds of Texas, on the other hand, has a humid, subtropical climate that is occasionally interrupted by intrusions of cold air from the north. Though variations in climate across Texas are considerable, they are nonetheless gradual.

WEATHER | The Handbook of Texas Online| Texas State Historical Association (TSHA)

In any event, while climate and topography will make for a good "region" with the National Weather Service, it has very little to do with how states are grouped when it comes to shared history and culture -- which is the true and traditional yardstick -- in a way that offsets them from other states, which are in turn put into a separate region...and for good reason. So that comes back to the question asked earlier...(about shared history and culture.

Finally, there is the matter of self-identification with a region. And here is the -- spanning 7 years and 17,000 respondents -- that Bass&Catfish mentioned above!

************************************************

WHERE IS THE SOUTH?

The South has been defined by a great many characteristics, but one of the most interesting definitions is where people believe that they are in the South. A related definition is where the residents consider themselves to be southerners, although this is obviously affected by the presence of non-southern migrants.

Until recently we did not have the data to answer the question of where either of those conditions is met. Since 1992, however, 14 twice-yearly Southern Focus Polls conducted by the Institute for Research in Social Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill have asked respondents from the 11 former Confederate states, Kentucky, and Oklahoma "Just for the record, would you say that your community is in the South, or not?" Starting with the third of the series, the same question was asked of smaller samples of respondents from West Virginia, Maryland, Delaware, the District of Columbia, and Missouri (all except Missouri included in the Bureau of the Census's "South"). Respondents from the 13 southern states were also asked "Do you consider yourself a Southerner, or not?," while starting with the second survey those from other states were asked "Do you consider yourself or anyone in your family a Southerner?," and if so, whether they considered themselves to be Southerners.

It is clear from these data that if the point is to isolate southerners for study or to compare them to other Americans the definition of the South employed by the Southern Focus Poll (and, incidentally, by the Gallup Organization) makes sense, while the Bureau of the Census definiton does not. We already knew that, of course, but it's good to be able to document it.

--John Shelton Reed

Percent who say their community is in the South (percentage base in parentheses)

Alabama 98 (717) South Carolina 98 (553) Louisiana 97 (606) Mississippi 97 (431) Georgia 97 (1017) Tennessee 97 (838) North Carolina 93 (1292) Arkansas 92 (400) Florida 90 (1792) Texas 84 (2050) Virginia 82 (1014) Kentucky 79 (582) Oklahoma 69 (411)

West Virginia 45 (82) Maryland 40 (173) Missouri 23 (177) Delaware 14 (21) D.C. 7 (15)

Percent who say they are Southerners (percentage base in parentheses)

Mississippi 90 (432) Louisiana 89 (606) Alabama 88 (716) Tennessee 84 (838) South Carolina 82 (553) Arkansas 81 (399) Georgia 81 (1017) North Carolina 80 (1290) Texas 68 (2053) Kentucky 68 (584) Virginia 60 (1012) Oklahoma 53 (410) Florida 51 (1791)

West Virginia 25 (84) Maryland 19 (192) Missouri 15 (197) New Mexico 13 (68) Delaware 12 (25) D.C. 12 (16) Utah 11 (70) Indiana 10 (208) Illinois 9 (362) Ohio 8 (396) Arizona 7 (117) Michigan 6 (336)

************************************

CHAPEL HILL Ask even educated Americans what states form "the South," and you're likely to get 100 different answers. Almost everyone will agree on Deep South states -- except maybe Florida -- but which border states belong and which dont can be endlessly debated.

Now, the Southern Focus Poll, conducted by the Institute for Research in Social Science at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, provides strong support for including such states as Texas, Kentucky and Oklahoma in the South. On the other hand, West Virginia, Maryland, Missouri, Delaware and the District of Columbia don't belong anymore, if they ever did.

Fourteen polls, surveying a total of more than 17,000 people between 1992 and 1999 show, for example, that only 7 percent of D.C. residents responding say that they live in the South.

Only 14 percent of Delaware residents think they live in the region, followed by Missourians with 23 percent, Marylanders with 40 percent and West Virginians with 45 percent.

"We found 84 percent of Texans, 82 percent of Virginians, 79 percent of Kentuckians and 69 percent of Oklahomans say they live in the South," says Dr. John Shelton Reed, director of the institute. "Our findings correspond to the traditional 13-state South as defined by the Gallup organization and others, but is different from the Census Bureaus South, which doesnt make sense."

The U.S. Census Bureau includes Delaware, D.C., Maryland and West Virginia in its definition.

"Clearly some parts of Texas aren't Southern whatever you mean by that -- and some parts of Maryland are," Reed said. "But sometimes you need to say what the Southern states are, and this kind of information can help you decide. Our next step is to look inside individual states like Texas, break the data down by county, and say, for example, where between Beaumont and El Paso people stop telling you that youre in the South."

A report on the findings, produced by UNC-CHs Institute for Research in Social Science, will appear in the June issue of the journal "Southern Cultures." Reed, who directs the institute, says the results should interest many people including survey, marketing and census researchers.

"Personally, I think they ought to be interesting too to ordinary folk who are curious about where people stop telling you youre in the South as you're travelling west or north," he said. "Where that is has been kind of hard to say sometimes."

Perhaps surprisingly, 11 percent of people in Utah, 10 percent in Indiana and slighter fewer people in Illinois, Ohio, Arizona and Michigan claim to be Southerners.

"That's because in the early part of this century millions of people left the South, and their migration was one of the great migrations not just in American history, but in world history," Reed said. "Their children may not think of themselves as Southern, but they still do."

The UNC-CH sociologist said he was surprised that 51 percent of Floridians describe themselves as Southerners even though 90 percent know their community is in the South.

"Florida is the only state in lower 48 where most people living there weren't born there," he said. "In fact, most of them weren't born in the South, much less in Florida."

Because of the South's growing economy, only between 90 and 80 percent of residents of Mississippi, Louisiana, Alabama, Tennessee, Arkansas, Georgia and the Carolinas said they are Southerners, the surveys showed.

"If you want to define the South as where people say it is, now we have a better sense of it," Reed said. "For the most part, it confirms what I already suspected, which is why I'm glad to see it. This work shows something we wanted to show, but haven't been able to before."

**************************************

To sum it up -- no disrespect intended, as you at least articulate your position well -- I often get the impression you are just tooling around and/or wanting to get a "reaction" out of people. Lots of the reason I say that, is because -- again -- so many of yours posts contradict each other...

Oh yeah...before signing off...please specifically lay out the reasons Delaware and Maryland are "more Southern than Texas and Oklahoma! LOL

Last edited by TexasReb; 01-24-2014 at 05:08 AM..
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