Proposing a new way to map intersections of photography and American
literature, Katherine Henninger demonstrates the importance of
pinpointing specific cultural and subcultural history. Ordering the
Facade traces the visual and literary cultures of southern womanhood
that have ordered the image of "the South" from its plantation past to
its "postsouthern" present. Assessed in light of these visual legacies,
contemporary writing by southern women emerges vividly in Henninger's
analysis as both shaped by and shaping these continuously powerful
representations.
Typically celebrated for their oral traditions, Henninger argues, the
South and its literature have in fact primarily relied on visual
characteristics such as skin color, gender, or dress to mark social
"place" and identity. From postmodern art gallery to family album,
photography in southern culture has both reinforced these cultural
prejudices and provided potent counterimages. Henninger analyzes
photography's literary functions in memoir, fiction, screenwriting, and
poetry by a wide range of contemporary authors including Dorothy
Allison, Ann Beattie, Rosemary Daniell, Julie Dash, Ronlyn Domingue,
Josephine Humphreys, Jill McCorkle, Lee Smith, Natasha Trethewey, Anne
Tyler, and Alice Walker. As each of these writers distinctively
re-envisions traditional constructions of southern womanhood, Henninger
shows, she joins the others in challenging the constrictions of
"southern woman" and so changing the meaning of southernness itself.