With its subtitle
A National Magazine for the South,
The Double Dealer positioned itself to combat a popular stereotype of
Southern literature as a provincial and second-rate "Sahara of the Bozart," as
H. L. Mencken termed it in a notorious 1917 essay. In a piece entitled "New Orleans, The Double Dealer and the Modern Movement in America",
Sherwood Anderson laid out the editors' vision of a modernism that operates not only at a national level but also embraces the cultural individuality of regions like the South. In pursuit of its inclusive vision,
The Double Dealer published African-American authors, and an unusually high proportion of its writers were women. ==Writers==