Tuesday, August 31, 2010

Almanac For Moderns: Gold In The Wing



August Thirty-First

August, the aureate month, draws to its blazing close - a month of sun, if there was one. Gold in the grain on the round-backed hill fields. Gold in the wood sunflowers, and in the summer goldenrod waving plumes all through the woodlot, trooping down the meadow to the brookside, marching in the dust of the roadways. Gold in the wing of the wild canaries, dipping and twittering as they flit from weed to bush, as if invisible waves of air tossed them up and down. The orange and yellow clover butterflies seek out the thistle, and the giant sulphur swallowtails are in their final brood. The amber, chaff-filled dust gilds all the splendid sunsets in cloudless, burning skies. Long, long after the sun has set, the sun-drenched earth gives back its heat, radiates it to the dim stars; the moon gets up in gold; before it lifts behind the black fields to the east I take it for a rick fire, till it rises like an old gold coin, that thieves have clipped on one worn edge. 


More information on our Almanac For Moderns project and the work of Donald Culross Peattie can be found here.

Thursday, August 26, 2010

Standing Up For Local Radio And Local Culture

photograph by Kelly Kress of Learn NC

Yesterday afternoon NPR's All Things Considered presented a feature on "The Merry-Go-Round," a weekly live music show broadcast out of Mount Airy, North Carolina on WPAQ radio. "The Merry -Go-Round" has been their Saturday morning staple since the station first went on the air in 1948; in fact, the station has remained true to founder Ralph Epperson's original mission, despite its place in an era where radio is increasingly pushed to follow homogeneous programming standards. Here's how WPAQ describes its relationship the community:
Fortunately for his friends and neighbors, Ralph Epperson believed in individualism and he had a mission in mind:  to serve his community.  In his application to the Federal Communications Commission, the young man pledged to reflect the cultural and musical values of the people in his station’s listening area.  He said he would present local talent, and he made good on that promise from the start.  Unlike many other station owners, however, Epperson largely stuck to his mission over the next six decades.  Live music by local musicians is still presented each Saturday on WPAQ’s Merry-Go-Round program.  Epperson himself hosted another program, the Blue Ridge Spotlight, on Saturday afternoons, on which he presented early recordings from the WPAQ archives and other recordings of area musicians and WPAQ’s weekly play lists are peppered with recordings of local musicians.  Preachers still hold forth on weekday mornings and nearly all day Sunday.  Announcers read the obituaries at least three times a day, and the Pet Patrol helps listeners get back together with wandering critters from blue tick hounds to hogs and heifers.  The music lurches from old time and bluegrass to easy listening after the evening news.  Ralph Epperson explained his philosophy to reporter Michelle Johnson of WFDD this way as she prepared a story about WPAQ for National Public Radio: “If people are doing the same thing in 25 places up and down the radio dial, why should I be number 26?”
If "The Merry-Go-Round" stands as one of the last live (and local) music shows on radio, at least in the old-time genre, then it is as much a testament to how Pete Seeger's belief in technology's ability to sustain traditional music can exist even after the culturally-deadening effects of the Telecommunications Act of 1996--the legislation that, with the sweep of President Clinton's pen, removed regulatory protections for local broadcasting outlets. 

However, we can now hear WPAQ live online from any location in the country, with unfettered availability as long as Net Neutrality is not a concept that meets an end similar to many small-market broadcasting outlets after 1996. In many ways, what the story of WPAQ presents to us is how such seemingly distant regulatory issues are rural issues, and how they can forcefully alter the contours of the rural arts. Listening to WPAQ, hundreds of miles from Mount Airy, it's hard not to be moved, to feel the need to work in our own finite and individual ways to spread the word about Net Neutrality--and to protect our access to treasures like WPAQ and "The Merry-Go-Round."

What other local radio stations are our readers listening to, either on the radio or on the internet? Feel free to drop us a line or comment on our Facebook page; we would love to follow up with more features on these stations, and to add them to our Rural Arts Map.  

Also, many thanks to Lisa from Legal Ruralism for alerting us to the NPR feature.

Tuesday, August 24, 2010

New Art From Jetsonorama's Rez


In the nine months since The Art of the Rural first appeared online, we  have learned a great deal about the visionary and diverse kinds of art coming out of rural America. Today  we would like to share an update on one of our favorite self-discoveries so far: Jetsonorama. Born in North Carolina, he came of age in the 1980's New York City hip-hop scene and later traveled through Africa (on bicycle) before moving to the Navajo nation to work as an Indian Health Services Physician. 

In April we discussed his wheat paste projects that were appearing, with the help of native artists, on reservations across the southwest. It's a powerful medium: on one level, these are provocative site-specific installations, yet, on a more intimate level, these wheat pastes are  portraits of a community that is both looking with reverence to the past and looking forward in the hopes of re-imagining their own place. Here is some new work:

Wesley Barrow's Last Portrait; Cedar Ridge, Arizona

Ben; Behind Chief Yellow Horse's roadside stand

Hank and Thelma; La Casa de Hugo Hernandez


Jetsonorama, under his given name of Chip Thomas, has also created a site for his photography. While many of black and white photos are the sources for the wheat paste images, they also capture--with a humanity that exceeds normal documentary photography--everyday life among the people he serves. 

This photography site also contains a gallery of images from his travels in Africa as well as another of photographs from places in this country and abroad. If we consider the census work that has been featured on The Daily Yonder lately,  then it seems wholly appropriate that these international influences should come to bear on his artwork in the Navajo Nation. In a moment when the traditional borders between city and country--and between cultures themselves--are becoming blurred, these photographs and wheat pastes stand as moving examples of a kind of rural art we should work toward in the coming years, one that refuses simple provincialisms yet celebrates local culture, one that accepts all the influences and voices projected--or wheat-pasted--within our familiar places. 

Ring Around The Rosey

Postnuptial Dance Over Monument Valley As The Bride's Mom Looks On

Homemade Glasses, Homemade Canoe

Monday, August 23, 2010

The Southern Foodways Alliance

The Southern Foodway Alliance's Oral History Interactive Map Project

We think these stories offer far more than just sustenance--we think they offer a way of thinking about race and class, gender and ethnicity, those deeply important issues that have long vexed and long defined the South.  - John T. Edge, Director of the Southern Foodways Alliance

Earlier this summer, when writing about corn cob wine and the new online food culture magazine The Zenchilada, we discovered The Southern Foodways Alliance. While some of our readers may already be familiar with the wide variety of cookbooks, traveling events and documentary work of the SFA, we had yet to discover them--and our first visit to their site was a bona fide moment of culinary revelation. 

The organization projects an ambitious mission, to "stage symposia on food culture, produce documentary films, publish compendiums of great writing, and—perhaps most importantly—preserve, promote, and chronicle our region’s culinary standard bearers." What is plainly evident across their various efforts (from cookbooks to "okracasts", video documentaries to oral histories) is that the SFA is able to consider both the Southern past and its present, and to locate what it calls "the spirit of reconciliation" that gathers across these foodways:


The SFA site is currently featuring about two dozen documentaries it has created in conjunction with The Center for Documentary Projects at The University of Mississippi. They all are outstanding, and we'll include one below. Here's Eat or We'll Both Starve, a film by Joe York about the Taylor (MS) Grocery, a legendary catfish joint with a series of time-honored rules that encourage their patrons to sit down, slow down, and get to know their neighbors.


The SFA has also done extensive oral history work--see the interactive map above--and many of these interviews and field recordings are accompanied with photographs. Aside from individual oral histories, the SFA has a few regional food culture projects: The Southern BBQ Trail, The Southern Boudin Trail, The Southern Gumbo Trail, The Mississippi Delta Hot Tamale Trail and Wine in the South

In addition to all of this, The Southern Foodways Alliance also operates a fascinating blog that features reports from folks who are cooking their way through the SFA's publications, as well as reports from the organization's interns. Check out the recent post by intern Kevin Kim on documenting the presence of Chinese American grocers in the Delta:
First introduced to the Mississippi Delta as indentured servants by planters during Reconstruction, these early Chinese sojourners soon became disenchanted with working in the fields and moved off the plantation to set up small grocery stores nearby. Mainly serving as an alternative to plantation commissaries and catering to a predominately African American clientele, the Chinese American grocer was a mainstay in many Delta neighborhoods well into the 20th century. Though their numbers have diminished in recent years, their history is an important part of the foodways of the Delta.

Thursday, August 19, 2010

Filming The Coal War

photograph from Brett Marshall

In the months since we began this website, we've tried, whenever possible, to share artists' responses to Mountaintop Removal. In past posts we've shared the work of Appalshop, the visionary organization based out of Whitesburg, Kentucky that has been producing documentaries, music recordings, theater performances and community radio for over 40 years. The artists and thinkers at Appalshop have been covering the environmental and cultural costs of our country's dependence on coal extraction (along with their larger project of preserving and celebrating Appalachian culture) for decades, and their work has blazed a trail for a new generation of artists.

The Coal War is a work-in-progress by a group of filmmakers from diverse backgrounds within the academy, the art world and the film industry. It's director, producer and principal cinematographer is Chad A. Stevens, an acclaimed photographer who is currently a professor at the University of North Carolina. Here is the film's synopsis, followed by a trailer for the project:
This is the story of a symbol: one mountain destined to be destroyed by the coal industry and the struggle to save Coal River Mountain by creating the first sustainable, green jobs project in the Central Appalachian coalfields: The Coal River Wind Farm.

Coal River Mountain is an ancient Appalachian cradle of rolling ridges and nestled hollows, providing refuge for delicate wildlife and a home to a unique mountain culture. But just beneath the surface lays something that calls into question the mountain’s very survival: $4.3 billion worth of coal. Massey Energy, the largest practitioner of mountaintop removal coal mining in West Virginia, holds permits to clear-cut 6,450 acres of hardwood forest, detonate thousands of tons of explosives and topple the mountain range into over nine miles of streams in the valleys below.

Since the 1960s, residents in the coal fields of West Virginia have fought to preserve their land, only to watch the coal industry continue to destroy mountains and uproot their ways of life. While the consequences of coal and mountaintop removal mining are severe – lethal flooding, water contamination, cancer pockets and the annihilation of the land on which families have lived for generations – the powerful coal companies have remained unstoppable. Recently, however, new hope has appeared in the form of a viable energy alternative to mountaintop removal: Wind Power.

This film documents a campaign that could serve as the foundation of one of great shifts in human history – the movement to break the addiction to a fossil fuel-based economy and shift to one rooted in renewable, green energy.

 The Coal War | Trailer 2 from Chad A. Stevens | milesfrommaybe on Vimeo.

The short films to emerge from Mr. Steven's footage of The Coal War have won numerous awards, and a critical mass is building around this film and the movement to save Coal River Mountain. Tom Zeller Jr. wrote an in-depth feature on the struggle last week in The New York Times, and the Discovery Channel's Planet Green channel recently leant its support to the film project. In both cases, it's encouraging to see how this issue--local to Appalachia--is being understood for its implications in an urban, and national, context. (The Coal War team has also reported recently on the EPA's wobbly stance on MTR for The Daily Yonder; for daily coverage of these issues, refer to the Coal Tattoo blog.) Beyond the numerous trailers for the film, The Coal War site offers a number of resources for viewers to learn more about Mountaintop Removal and to get involved. 

One such opportunity is approaching: Appalachia Rising, a "mass mobilization" that will gather in Washington, DC during the weekend of September 25th and then branch out across the nation's coalfields for a national Day of Action on Monday September 27th. Below is an internet trailer; please follow the links for more information on how you can get involved:


Tuesday, August 17, 2010

Zora Neale Hurston's Florida

photograph by Chip Litherland for The New York Times

Last week we mentioned the Florida Memory archive--a site that, in many places, is enriched by the imagination and the documentary work of writer and folklorist Zora Neale Hurston. While Ms. Hurston is well-known as a luminary of the Harlem Renaissance and author of Their Eyes Were Watching God, her gifts also extended toward celebrating and preserving the local culture that leant such inspiration to her creative writing.

The Florida Memory site features a compilation of her sound recordings (listen to her sing "Shove It Over") as well as photographs, documents and educational resources related to her research in the Turpentine Camps of Cross City when she worked for the Federal Writers Project (a program within the Work Progress Administration). As a folklorist, she composed in film as well as prose. In the below video our contributor Ian Halbert discovered, Ms. Hurston films Cudjo Lewis, the last survivor of the final African slave ship that arrived 1859:


Like so many other twentieth-century artists born into rural America, Ms. Hurston actively cultivated a worldview that increasingly saw the rural and urban as interlinked places. Though she spent a great deal of time in New York City and elsewhere, she always returned to live in her hometown of Eatonville, Florida (the oldest incorporated African-American municipality in the country), bringing with her an imagination and an honesty that did not always fit seamlessly into the life of this small town. The New York Times has put together a fine short documentary about Ms. Hurston's relationship to Eatonville, to accompany Damien Cave's article on this resilient community. Unfortunately, we can't embed the documentary, so please visit the link above--it's well worth your time. Also, NYT reporter Adam H. Graham offers this follow-up article that discusses all the local places to visit. 

Any discussion of Zora Neale Hurston and Eatonville, Florida must also mention Zora Fest, an annual festival that celebrates the writer, her works and the culture of the region:

Friday, August 13, 2010

The Florida Memory Archives


photo-postcard from the Florida Photographic Collection

After discussing the Farm Security Administration archives and the Captured in Color exhibit recently, it seems like a perfect moment to bring The Florida Memory site into the conversation. Administered by the state's Library & Archives department, the Florida Memory archives is a  comprehensive (and gorgeously designed) site that is fully-searchable; they offer an exhaustive list of photographs, postcards and films in their Photographic Collection, as well as a fascinating array of high-quality scans of important historical documents. They also offer an Online Classroom with education resources appropriate to Floridians, but also to students from any location--and the site's online exhibits are also provocative starting points for classroom discussion, contemplation or artistic inspiration (check out Pestilence, Potions, and Persistence: Early Florida Medicine).

There's yet another facet of this site that will interest a number of our readers. Adam from 50 Miles of Elbow Room introduced me to the Florida Folklife Collection portion of the Florida Memory site, which contains the absolutely exhaustive documentation of the Florida Folk Festival. Visitors will find complete listings and information on each year's festival, from the 1950's to the present day. What's even more impressive about this resource is that the performances from 1954-1979 are offered directly, for streaming or download, at no charge. Every conceivable form of folk music is represented here: gospel, shape note singing, blues, Native American song, (to name a few) as well as traditional music from around the world.

What's more, for those who would prefer a more concise selection from the Festival, The Florida Folklife Collection has created four compilations. These are available as complimentary mp3 downloads, but they will also send the CD versions of these compilations to your home for free. The discs are wonderful, and they capture the rich variety of performances across the decades, from well-known acts such as the Stanley Brothers to local folk musicians. 

Included below are a few short films of the Festival and Florida folklife available at their site, and also at their Youtube page: