GREAT DISRUPTION IN SOUTHERN SOCIETY AS REFLECTED IN JOHN GRISHAM'S THE TESTAMENT Tatit Hariyanti l Abstract: At the dawn of the twentieth century. especially after the invention of internet the world began to transform itself into information age which was characterized by the production more of two things people value most in a modern democracy - freedom and equality. Freedom of choice has exploded and hierarchies of all sorts, have come under pressure and begun to crumble. People were trapped in a globalized and homogenous condition. Accompanying rhe shift there arouses social disorders which is indicated especially by the decline of family values . As that of other industrialized countries, when the United States becomes more advanced it is assumed that all its states experience the same condition. There seems no place for distinctive feature. The southern states which always claim and are claimed to be distinctive from the rest will . therefore. be interesting and worth observing. Taking John Grisham's work. The Testament. which is set in Virginia in the year of J 996s, as the main source, this study is done under the notion that literary works could serve as mental evidence of what happens in society. The result demonstrates that Southern society experience the same condition. The increasing individualism in turn exerts great influence on thefamily life. The bond becomes more loosen and distrust rises. Key words: southern society. distinct. decline,family bond. distrust Dra. Tatit Hariyanti, M.Hum. is a state lecturer of the Faculty of Letters, Yogyakarta University of Technology. She acomplished her undergraduate degree at the Faculty of Letters. Gadjah Mada University in 1986, masters degree at the same university in 1998 and now is taking a doctoral degree at the same University. She is writing her dissertation entitled "Will and Testament in Southern Culture" and this article is part of her dissertation. T. Hariyatiti, Great Disruption in Southern Society: The Testament 29. BIBLIOGRAPHY Cash, W.J. The Mind of the South. New York: Vintage Books. 1941. Chester, R. "Should American children be protected against disinheritance". In Real Property. Probate and Trust Journal. USA. findarticles.coml p/articles/mi-qa3714, retrieved 1997. Clinton, C. The Plantation Mistress.USA: Pantheon Books, 1983. Daniel, P. Standing at the Crosssroads: Southern Life Since 1900. New York: Collins Publisher, 1986. Fukuyama, F. The Great Disruption. Human Nature and the Reconstruction of Social Order. London: Profile Books, 2000. Goldfield, D.R. Promised Land: The South Since 1945. USA: Harlan Davidson, Inc., 1987. Grisham, J. The Testament. UK: Arrow Books, Ltd., 1999. Horton, R.W. dan Edward, W.H. Background of American Literary Thought. New Jersey: Prentice-Hall, Inc., 1974. Hudkins, R. "Estate Planning-Intent to Disinherit or Oversight?" In global- wills.comlarticlelLast-will-and-testamentiintent to disinherit.htm, 2006. "Magnificent Communication, 1999-200 I". In www.lawyerment.com. retrieved on 26 March 2007. Matheson, A.A. Will. USA: School of Law, Columbia University, no publication date. Rabinowitz, HN. The First New South 1865 1920. Illinois: Harlan Davidson,lnc., 1992. Smith, T. W. The Emerging 21st Century American Family. USA: Research Center ofUnivrsity of Chicago, 1999. "The Great Disruption". In The Atlantic Monthly. USA: The Atlantic Monthly Company. Volume 283, No.5, May 1999: 55-80 Woodword, CV. The Burden of Southern History. USA: The New American Library, Inc., 1969. Wyatt-Brown, B. Southern Honor. Ethics and Behavior in the Old South. London: Oxford University Press, 1982. Zeraffe, M. "The Novel as Literary Form and as Social Institution".In Sociology of Literature and Drama. Edited by Elizabeth dan Tom Bums. UK: Penguin Books, 1973. logo: