Wagging Tongues and Tittle Tattle

About The Book

In <i>Wagging Tongues and Tittle Tattle</i> Sylvia Hoffert calls on a particularly rich collection of primary sources including diaries letters oral histories census data court documents church records and psychiatric hospital logs all relating to Hillsborough North Carolina to argue that gossip and rumor were central to the formation of interpersonal relationships and an integral part of small-town life in the antebellum South. They exposed the insecurities and anxieties of the town's inhabitants. Indeed they served as important weapons in the power struggle between the white slaveholding elite--who tried to exert maintain and consolidate their control over community life--and the Black white and mixed-race men and women free and enslaved who did their best to challenge the socioeconomic status quo. And they exposed fissures in the social fabric that discretion good manners and historical amnesia could not obscure. The result was that on a day-to-day basis the shady streets of Hillsborough may have seemed peaceful to the casual observer. But underneath all that tranquility the town was ripe with competition and conflict as the inhabitants used gossip to negotiate relationships with their neighbors and make places for themselves in the social economic and political hierarchy of the community.
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