event graphic for Southern Women, Southern Landscapes book signing at Lemuria Books on January 29 at 5 p.m. The lefthand side features the book cover, which is green with yellow text and a colorful floral painting. The bottom of the graphic features the author portraits, Smith left, Page right. The righthand side of the graphic features the Lemuria and EWHG logos, and the background is the Eudora Welty House.
An examination of the lives, gardens, writing, and artwork of Southern women who found inspiration and identity in nature.
On Thursday, January 29 at 5 p.m., authors Elise Smith and Judith Page will be in conversation with Lauren Rhoades at Lemuria Books in Jackson, Mississippi. 

This event is co-hosted by the Eudora Welty House & Garden, and only books purchased at Lemuria will be signed. 


Southern Women, Southern Landscapes: Cultural Reflections on the Garden, 1870–1970 is an exploration of a number of Southern women—writers, artists, and gardeners, both Black and white—who looked to the land for inspiration and identity.

Examining figures ranging from Reconstruction through the height of the civil rights era in Florida, Louisiana, North Carolina, Mississippi, and Virginia, Southern Women, Southern Landscapes focuses on a period that marks a profound change in women’s cultural and social roles. Page and Smith explore the women’s various attitudes toward the natural world as they responded to the disruptions of war and the restrictions of race and gender.

The book emphasizes the concept of a “storied landscape,” recognizing that landscapes are both natural and cultural phenomena that speak to humans who are open to their narratives. The women featured in Southern Women, Southern Landscapes were often concerned with place-making and the specificity of locale, including gardens, larger landscapes, and wild places, but they also believed in a shared responsibility to care for the earth more generally. Communities, partnerships, and friendships in various forms were all crucial to their creativity in the garden or in other endeavors related to the natural world. This book addresses these broad-ranging issues through extensive archival research to support a variety of genres and media—novels, poetry, essays, letters, and newspapers, as well as book illustrations, photographs, folk art, and more traditional paintings.

Judith W. Page, professor emerita in the Department of English at University of Florida, is author of extensive individual publications in the field of English literature.

Elise L. Smith, professor emerita in the Art Department at Millsaps College, is author of extensive individual publications in the field of art history. Page and Smith are coauthors of Women, Literature, and the Domesticated Landscape: England’s Disciples of Flora, 1780–1870 and Women, Literature, and the Arts of the Countryside in Early Twentieth-Century England.

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Thursday, January 22
Monday, January 26

Starting Monday, January 26, at noon CST, we will spend the next few months reading and discussing the correspondence of

Thursday, January 29
An examination of the lives, gardens, writing, and artwork of Southern women who found inspiration

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