Quote:
Originally Posted by pdxtex
All four of the south's really big cities, Miami, Atlanta, Houston, Dallas seem to be ascending at the same time. I get what you are saying tho, maybe Atlanta had its media moment a decade or two ago but I don't think that's stopped people from moving there at all.
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For sure - I didn't mean to imply that Atlanta was stagnating, it's just that the South doesn't have one clear, big city that dominates everywhere else like the Midwest does or New England does, so Atlanta, Miami, Houston and Dallas kind of jockey around in people's consciouness and each have their moment. Right now doesn't seem like Atlanta's moment.
Another thing about the South is that it kind of bleeds into other regions, and there are some very big, very prominent cities that are kind of in the grey zone of what we would consider "the South". So, Miami, Houston, Dallas and DC are all roughly the same size, all very important and big and you can argue one way, or another, that these cities are Southern or not.
Then there's the fact that the old spiritual and cultural capital of the South - the Kyoto or Florence of the South, if you will - is New Orleans. Atlanta is definitely in the Deep South, but not the Deep South associated with the Mississippi river and its Delta, which is a very important subregion that a lot of people think about when they think about "the South".