The NEW ENCYCLOPEDIA of SOUTHERN CULTURE
VOLUME 23 : FOLK ART
Volumes to appear in
The New Encyclopedia of Southern Culture
are:
Agriculture and Industry | Law and Politics |
Art and Architecture | Literature |
Education | Media |
Environment | Music |
Ethnicity | Myth, Manners, and Memory |
Folk Art | Race |
Folklife | Religion |
Foodways | Science and Medicine |
Gender | Social Class |
Geography | Sports and Recreation |
History | Urbanization |
Language | Violence |
This book was published with the generous assistance of
JOHN JERIT.
The Anniversary Endowment Fund of the University of North Carolina Press provided additional support for publication of this book.
2013 The University of North Carolina Press
All rights reserved
Designed by Richard Hendel
Set in Minion types by Tseng Information Systems, Inc.
Manufactured in the United States of America
The paper in this book meets the guidelines for permanence and durability of the Committee on Production Guidelines for Book Longevity of the Council on Library Resources.
The University of North Carolina Press has been a member of the Green Press Initiative since 2003.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Folk art / Carol Crown and Cheryl Rivers, volume editors.
p. cm. (The new encyclopedia of Southern culture ; v. 23)
Published with the assistance of John Jerit and of the Anniversary
Endowment Fund of the University of North Carolina Press.
Sponsored by the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the
University of Mississippi.
Includes bibliographical references and index.
ISBN 978-0-8078-3442-8 (alk. paper)
ISBN 978-0-8078-7174-4 (pbk.: alk. paper)
1. Folk artSouthern StatesEncyclopedias. 2. Outsider art
Southern StatesEncyclopedias. 3. Art, AmericanSouthern
StatesEncyclopedias. 4. ArchitectureSouthern States
Encyclopedias. I. Crown, Carol. II. Rivers, Cheryl, 1949.
III. University of Mississippi. Center for the Study of
Southern Culture. IV. Series.
F209 .N47 2006 vol. 23
[NK811]
975.003 sdc22
2012473073
The Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, sponsored by the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi, was published by the University of North Carolina Press in 1989.
cloth 17 16 15 14 13 5 4 3 2 1
paper 17 16 15 14 13 5 4 3 2 1
Tell about the South. Whats it like there.
What do they do there. Why do they live there.
Why do they live at all.
WILLIAM FAULKNER
Absalom, Absalom!
CONTENTS
GENERAL INTRODUCTION
In 1989 years of planning and hard work came to fruition when the University of North Carolina Press joined the Center for the Study of Southern Culture at the University of Mississippi to publish the Encyclopedia of Southern Culture. While all those involved in writing, reviewing, editing, and producing the volume believed it would be received as a vital contribution to our understanding of the American South, no one could have anticipated fully the widespread acclaim it would receive from reviewers and other commentators. But the Encyclopedia was indeed celebrated, not only by scholars but also by popular audiences with a deep, abiding interest in the region. At a time when some people talked of the vanishing South, the book helped remind a national audience that the region was alive and well, and it has continued to shape national perceptions of the South through the work of its many usersjournalists, scholars, teachers, students, and general readers.
As the introduction to the Encyclopedia noted, its conceptualization and organization reflected a cultural approach to the South. It highlighted such issues as the core zones and margins of southern culture, the boundaries where the South overlapped with other cultures, the role of history in contemporary culture, and the centrality of regional consciousness, symbolism, and mythology. By 1989 scholars had moved beyond the idea of cultures as real, tangible entities, viewing them instead as abstractions. The Encyclopedias editors and contributors thus included a full range of social indicators, trait groupings, literary concepts, and historical evidence typically used in regional studies, carefully working to address the distinctive and characteristic traits that made the American South a particular place. The introduction to the Encyclopedia concluded that the fundamental uniqueness of southern culture was reflected in the volumes composite portrait of the South. We asked contributors to consider aspects that were unique to the region but also those that suggested its internal diversity. The volume was not a reference book of southern history, which explained something of the design of entries. There were fewer essays on colonial and antebellum history than on the postbellum and modern periods, befitting our conception of the volume as one trying not only to chart the cultural landscape of the South but also to illuminate the contemporary era.
When C. Vann Woodward reviewed the Encyclopedia in the New York Review of Books, he concluded his review by noting the continued liveliness of interest in the South and its seeming inexhaustibility as a field of study. Research on the South, he wrote, furnishes proof of the value of the Encyclopedia as a scholarly undertaking as well as suggesting future needs for revision or supplement to keep up with ongoing scholarship. The two decades since the publication of the Encyclopedia of Southern Culture have certainly suggested that Woodward was correct. The American South has undergone significant changes that make for a different context for the study of the region. The South has undergone social, economic, political, intellectual, and literary transformations, creating the need for a new edition of the Encyclopedia that will remain relevant to a changing region. Globalization has become a major issue, seen in the South through the appearance of Japanese automobile factories, Hispanic workers who have immigrated from Latin America or Cuba, and a new prominence for Asian and Middle Eastern religions that were hardly present in the 1980s South. The African American return migration to the South, which started in the 1970s, dramatically increased in the 1990s, as countless books simultaneously appeared asserting powerfully the claims of African Americans as formative influences on southern culture. Politically, southerners from both parties have played crucial leadership roles in national politics, and the Republican Party has dominated a near-solid South in national elections. Meanwhile, new forms of music, like hip-hop, have emerged with distinct southern expressions, and the term dirty South has taken on new musical meanings not thought of in 1989. New genres of writing by creative southerners, such as gay and lesbian literature and white trash writing, extend the southern literary tradition.
Meanwhile, as Woodward foresaw, scholars have continued their engagement with the history and culture of the South since the publication of the Encyclopedia, raising new scholarly issues and opening new areas of study. Historians have moved beyond their earlier preoccupation with social history to write new cultural history as well. They have used the categories of race, social class, and gender to illuminate the diversity of the South, rather than a unified mind of the South. Previously underexplored areas within the field of southern historical studies, such as the colonial era, are now seen as formative periods of the regions character, with the Souths positioning within a larger Atlantic world a productive new area of study. Cultural memory has become a major topic in the exploration of how the social construction of the South benefited some social groups and exploited others. Scholars in many disciplines have made the southern identity a major topic, and they have used a variety of methodologies to suggest what that identity has meant to different social groups. Literary critics have adapted cultural theories to the South and have raised the issue of postsouthern literature to a major category of concern as well as exploring the links between the literature of the American South and that of the Caribbean. Anthropologists have used different theoretical formulations from literary critics, providing models for their fieldwork in southern communities. In the past 30 years anthropologists have set increasing numbers of their ethnographic studies in the South, with many of them now exploring topics specifically linked to southern cultural issues. Scholars now place the Native American story, from prehistory to the contemporary era, as a central part of southern history. Comparative and interdisciplinary approaches to the South have encouraged scholars to look at such issues as the borders and boundaries of the South, specific places and spaces with distinct identities within the American South, and the global and transnational Souths, linking the American South with many formerly colonial societies around the world.
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