Rural Life and Culture in the Upper Cumberland.Rural Life and Culture in the Upper Cumberland. Edited by Michael E. Birdwell and W. Calvin Dickinson. (Lexington: University Press of Kentucky The University Press of Kentucky (UPK) is the scholarly publisher for the Commonwealth of Kentucky, and was organized in 1969 as successor to the University of Kentucky Press. The university had sponsored scholarly publication since 1943. , c. 2004. Pp. xii, 369. $45.00, ISBN ISBN abbr. International Standard Book Number ISBN International Standard Book Number ISBN n abbr (= International Standard Book Number) → ISBN m 0-8131-2309-7.) Rural Life and Culture in the Upper Cumberland is an anthology on the region defined as the drainage basin drainage basin: see catchment area. of the Cumberland River Cumberland River River, Kentucky and Tennessee, U.S. It rises in southeastern Kentucky and flows west, looping through northern Tennessee before returning north to join the Ohio River after a course of 687 mi (1,106 km). and its tributaries in Tennessee and Kentucky. (Two maps help the reader locate the region and its counties.) The editors explain that the essays focus on culture, construed in a broad way, and fall into three categories: popular culture, material culture, and warfare and culture. Topics such as traditional music, health and recreational spas, and folklore and legend, for example, fall into the first category; pieces on comb graves, housing, and crafts fall into the second. Essays on the Civil War, Sergeant Alvin Cullum York, and the army's use of the area for maneuvers during World War n fall into the third category. The editors' introduction ties scholarship on the region--presumably, including the anthology--to Appalachian studies, as opposed to southern studies. (The latter seems to be defined as studies of the Deep South but not the upland South.) Indeed, some of the contributions link topically to many elements common in Appalachian studies. Charles K. Wolfe's work on traditional music investigates tunes, styles (e.g., bluegrass bluegrass, any species of the large and widely distributed genus Poa, chiefly range and pasture grasses of economic importance in temperate and cool regions. In general, bluegrasses are perennial with fine-leaved foliage that is bluish green in some species. ), and musicians (e.g., Lester Flatt and Earl Scruggs) often connected to Appalachia, as well as to Middle Tennessee and the Grand Ole Opry Grand Ole Opry, weekly American radio program featuring live country and western music. The nation's oldest continuous radio show, it was first broadcast in 1925 on Nashville's WSM as an amateur showcase. , for that matter. Allison Ensor's essay on literature discusses such well-known Appalachian authors as Harriet Arnow, Mary Noailles Murfree Mary Noailles Murfree (January 24, 1850-July 31, 1922) was an American fiction writer of novels and short stories who wrote under the pen name Charles Egbert Craddock. Murfree was born near Murfreesboro, Tennessee, in the house later celebrated in her novel, , and John Fox Jr. The discussion on arts and crafts arts and crafts, term for that general field of applied design in which hand fabrication is dominant. The term was coined in England in the late 19th cent. as a label for the then-current movement directed toward the revivifying of the decorative arts. by W. Calvin Dickinson and Michael E. Birdwell not only examines styles and traditions peculiar to the Cumberland but also elaborates on the marketing, promotion, and artistic elevation of craft that began during the Great Depression. Another essay by Birdwell ties Alvin York, the World War I hero, to the Appalachian legacy of Davy Crockett. Wali R. Kharif's work on African Americans links closely to the history and recent historiography of blacks in Appalachia. Slaves in the Upper Cumberland, for instance, "worked in a wide variety of occupations, though most were employed as agricultural workers and domestics" on small holdings, as was common in Appalachia but not in the Deep South plantation world (p. 106). William Lynwood Montell's essay on oral narrative and folklore investigates ways of preserving community tradition common in rural Appalachia. A number of the essays are most interesting in the way they connect events and people in the Cumberland to national trends and ideas. The Birdwell chapter on Alvin York, the Fentress County man who became famous and symbolic for the war exploits he was so shy about and who today is used by right-wing militias and fundamentalist Christian groups to espouse an intolerance that York disavowed, stands out. Stuart Patterson's study of the Cumberland Homesteads, a New Deal effort to relocate displaced miners and factory hands, links the national program's utopian and compassionate side to one of its local manifestations. Dickinson's piece, entitled "Radical Hillbillies," explores the founding and demise of the utopian community of Rugby and the establishment of Highlander Folk School Highlander Folk School, New Market, Tenn.; founded in 1932 by Myles Horton in Monteagle, Tenn., now known as the Highlander Research and Education Center. At first the school focused on training union organizers, but in the 1950s Highlander became a center of the and demonstrates how international political and philosophical thought influenced local action. Overall, the collection is a most interesting one that contains pieces on both mainstream subjects (Civil War, religion, architecture) and niche topics (comb graves, nudist colonies, caves). A few of the essays could have been enriched, however, by the incorporation of gender analysis. All of them are documented, but a number are marred by sporadic citation. James B. Jones Jr.'s article on the Civil War clearly is the best-documented essay in the book. Nonetheless, the collection will prove useful to students and scholars of rural life in Appalachia. MARIE Marie (mərē`), 1875–1938, queen of Romania, consort of Ferdinand. The daughter of Alfred, duke of Edinburgh and of Saxe-Coburg-Gotha, she was the granddaughter of Czar Alexander II of Russia and of Queen Victoria of England. TEDESCO East Tennessee State University East Tennessee State University (ETSU) is an accredited American university, founded October 21911 and located in Johnson City, Tennessee. It is part of the Tennessee Board of Regents system of colleges and universities. |
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