Sunday, March 24, 2013

Appalachian Studies Association National Conference



This afternoon I got back from the ASA conference in Boone. I presented a paper there that is one of the starting points for my new book. The paper is "Gnarly Roots: Exploring the British Sources of Appalachian Folk Magic."

Here's the abstract--

 As Appalachian mountain culture is transformed through modern technology and generations of rural isolation are broken by in-migration, some of the older folk traditions are fading into obscurity. My area of research is folk magic and superstition and “Gnarly Roots” marks the next step in this research. In this paper, I will link certain practices and beliefs to similar ones in the British Isles and attempt to find the migrational links that brought these practices into the southern Appalachians. I began my formal exploration of this material with the presentation of the paper “Hillbilly Hoodoo and the Question of Cultural Strip-mining” as part of the Forging Folklore colloquium, hosted by Harvard’s Department of Folklore and Mythology, in 2007. My continuing study led to the publication of a primer on these traditions called “Staubs and Ditchwater” in June 2012. My next step is to look at the sources of these traditions—Cherokee, Scots-Irish, German and English, beginning with English and Scots-Irish. With the help of colleagues in Britain, I will be acting as a “spellcatcher”—as earlier musicologist were “song catchers” in the southern highlands tracing the haunting mountain music to its British roots. “Gnarly Roots: Exploring the British Sources of Appalachian Folk Magic” is the first step in this cultural exploration and will continue with a research trip to Great Britain and Ireland in the summer of 2013.

And here are the opening paragraphs--


My roots in these old mountains are deep and gnarled. My story is a familiar one of poor soil and a narrow escape and a return home. And even as these roots grow older, I am looking backward over my shoulder. Looking eastward.

Some of my people practice old ways of healing and justice that academics may refer to as Appalachian folk magic. It is called “granny magic” and “cove doctoring”, too, but most of the people who practiced it—and practice it still—don’t have a particular name for it. They are country folks who know what herb to use for what and how to whisper warts away and blow the fire out of a nasty burn.

 I grew up in a cove in west Buncombe county at a time when a silver dime on a string was worn by teething babies and a tired woman could prevent a pregnancy with the strategic use of Queen Anne’s Lace seeds. Those old ways stuck with me through college and graduate school and have come full circle in a book I published last year—a primer called “Staubs and Ditchwater.”  In this modern age, an author can’t simply write a book and find a kind publisher to print it up.  She must give talks and do book-signings and those have been a delight and an education as I learn what other people have done in their own coves and hollers.

Wednesday, March 6, 2013

A Place to Dream and Scheme

Since this is the portal for the first book and that whole process, I'm thinking I'll shift a bit here and let this also be the place where I chronicle the path to the second book.

I'll tell you all about the plans for presenting papers and getting myself to these interesting, inspiring and exhausting conferences.

I'll share bits and pieces of the writing that will form the foundation of "Gnarly Roots" and generally blather on and on about traveling--which is the big thing I'm doing this year.

I'll make sure the links work--thanks, Fern!--and try to amuse you as the mood strikes.

Off we go!


Monday, March 4, 2013

Return of the Prodigal

Y'all, I have been so busy with this little book that I have not been blogging about it, but doing it.  Since it was published last June, we have sold nearly 500 copies of the darned thing and I made an appointment for another book event just this morning!

I had no idea how much interest there would be in this old information and am very, very grateful.

If you are on Facebook and would like to keep up with "Staubs" there, I made a page for it.  Here's the link-

https://www.facebook.com/staubsandditchwater

The big news I want to share with you are a couple of conferences and a research trip planned for the summer.  I will be presenting a paper at the Appalachian Studies Association conference in Boone at ASU on March 22-24.  The title is "Gnarly Roots: Exploring the British Sources of Appalachian Folk Magic."  I'm still working on it, of course, but hope to have a good rough draft by Wednesday.

I'm presenting at a conference in April called Sacred Landscapes. That one is in Columbia, SC and I'm presenting "Rock-candy Cairns: How the Irish and Scots-Irish Diasporas Produced Pagans in Old Appalachia."  Here's the link for that conference--

http://www.cherryhillseminary.org/students/degree-programs/intensives-and-conferences/ronald-hutton-featured-in-spring-chs-usc-symposium-more-info-tba/

Ronald Hutton is the keynote speaker and he was also at the Harvard conference that started this all so long ago.

And finally--I'm heading over to Britain in July to do some field research on the border reivers and to talk to folks who practice what I do, but over there.  It will be the basis of the sequel to "Staubs" which will be "Strange and Gnarly Roots: an Appalachian Spellcatcher in Britain" (or something like that).

I'll be tring to keep you posted here about the process and will give you some chances to participate in gathering information, if you're interested.

Thanks for checking back in with me!