Arts in Earnest

Arts in Earnest

North Carolina Folklife

  • Author: Patterson, Daniel W.; Zugg III, Charles G.
  • Publisher: Duke University Press
  • ISBN: 9780822309437
  • eISBN Pdf: 9780822381617
  • Place of publication:  Durham , United States
  • Year of digital publication: 1989
  • Month: October
  • Pages: 331
  • DDC: 398/.09756
  • Language: English
Arts in Earnest explores the unique folklife of North Carolina from ruddy ducks to pranks in the mill. Traversing from Murphy to Manteo, these fifteen essays demonstrate the importance of North Carolina’s continually changing folklife. From decoy carving along the coast, to the music of tobacco chants and the blues of the Piedmont, to the Jack tales of the mountains, Arts in Earnest reflects the story of a people negotiating their rapidly changing social and economic environment.
Personal interviews are an important element in the book. Laura Lee, an elderly black woman from Chatham County, describes the quilts she made from funeral flower ribbons; witnesses and friends each remember varying details of the Duke University football player who single-handedly vanquished a gang of would-be muggers; Clyde Jones leads a safari through his backyard, which is filled with animals made of wood and cement that represent nontraditional folk art; the songs and sermon of a Primitive Baptist service flow together as one—“it tills you up all over”; Durham bluesman Willie Trice, one of a handful of Durham musicians who recorded in the 1930s and early 1940s, remembers when the active tobacco warehouses offered ready audiences—“They’d tip us a heap of change to play some music”; and Goldsboro tobacco auctioneer H. L. “Speed” Riggs chants 460 words per minute, five to six times faster than a normal conversational rate.
  • Contents
  • Acknowledgments
  • Introduction
  • Of the Past
    • 1 The North Carolina Wildfowl Decoy Tradition
    • 2 “I Never Could Play Alone”: The Emergence of the New River Valley String Band, 1875–1915
    • 3 The Hugh Dixon Homestead: What to Make of Tradition?
    • 4 Economic and Cultural Influences on German and Scotch-Irish Quilts in Antebellum Rowan County, North Carolina
    • 5 The Development of the Bright-Leaf Tobacco Auctioneer’s Chant
  • Of Individuals
    • 6 The Solitary Memory: A Greek-American’s Recollections of the Folk Play Panáretos
    • 7 The Banjo-Song Genre: A Study of “High Sheriff,” Dink Roberts’s Man-against-the-Law Song
    • 8 The Narrative Style of Marshall Ward, Jack-Tale-Teller
    • 9 Symbols from Ribbons: Afro-American Funeral-Ribbon Quilts in Chatham County, North Carolina
    • 10 “Learnin’, Though”; Environmental Art as a Creative Process
  • Of Communities
    • 11 In the Good Old Way: Primitive Baptist Tradition in an Age of Change
    • 12 Banjos and Blues
    • 13 Why Do Duck Decoys Have Eyes?
    • 14 Tugging on Superman’s Cape: The Making of a College Legend
    • 15 The Dissembling Line: Industrial Pranks in a North Carolina Textile Mill
  • Notes
  • Contributors
  • Index

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