Acknowledgments
A Note on the Text
Introduction: Scott and Zelda on the South Side of Paradise
Kirk Curnutt and Sara A. Kosiba
Part One: Inconstant Circles
Chapter One: Sara Mayfield: Zelda’s Southern Biographer
Jennifer Horne
Chapter Two: Bittersweet Memories: Southern Womanhood in the Work of Zelda Sayre Fitzgerald, Sarah Haardt Mencken, and Estelle Oldham Faulkner
Ashley Lawson
Part Two: Tarleton Trespasses: City Limits and Artistic Expanses
Chapter Three: The Sounds and the Smells of the South: The Meaning and Use of the Auditory and Olfactory in Fitzgerald’s Tarleton Trilogy
Niklas Salmose
Chapter Four: From Jelly-Bean to Jazz-Master (and Back): Region, Class, and Masquerade in the Jim Powell Stories
Robert Beuka
Chapter Five: What’s on Fitzgerald’s Bookcase?: A Rereading of ‘The Jelly-Bean’
John Allen Brooks
Chapter Six: Lamenting the Loss of Old Southern Charm: ‘The Last of the Belles’
Lauren Rule Maxwell
Part Three: Contested Territories
Chapter Seven: Going South: Disaster Beneath the Mason-Dixon Line in The Beautiful and Damned
J. Bret Maney
Chapter Eight: The Georgia-Kentucky Border and the Southern Subtext of The Great Gatsby
Bryant Mangum
Chapter Nine: Southern Domesticity Abroad: A Belle’s Failed Guide to Housekeeping
Rickie-Ann Legleitner
Chapter Ten: Expressing the Inexpressible: The Logic of Sensation in Zelda Fitzgerald’s Art
Samantha Bankston
Part Four: Border Skirmishes
Chapter Eleven: Nostalgic Exile: Mapping the South and American Modernity in ‘The Swimmers’
Jonathan Jones
Chapter Twelve: ‘Family in the Wind’: F. Scott Fitzgerald’s Last Great Saturday Evening Post Story
Park Bucker
Chapter Thirteen: ‘Those Years Were Bitter on the Border’: F. Scott Fitzgerald and the Aftermath of Civil War
Helen M. Turner
Conclusion: Cartographies Interrupted: The Love of the Last Tycoon and Caesar’s Things
Kirk Curnutt
About the Contributors