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Selling Tradition Appalachia and the Construction of an American Folk, 1930-1940 (review) Maria R. Miller Southern Cultures, Volume 5, Number 4, Winter 1999, pp. 79-82 (Review) Published by The University of North Carolina Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/scu.1999.0004 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/423878/summary Access provided at 18 Feb 2020 17:02 GMT from JHU Libraries Selling Tradition Appalachia and the Construction of an American Folk, 19 30-1 940 By Jane S. Becker University of North CaroUna Press, 1998 3 5 2 pp. Cloth, $ 55 .00; paper $18.95 Reviewed by Maria R. Miller of the University of Massachusetts at Amherst, who has focused much of her research on laboring women in rural New England before industrialization and on gender and commemorative style in Deerfield, Massachusetts (1870—1920). About two years ago, after nearly ten years in the roUing Piedmont of North Car- oUna, I moved to New England. As I prepared to go, I started coUecting things, Utde pieces of the South to bring with me to the North. One of these objects was a moss green coverlet from the looms of Churchül Weavers in Berea, Kentucky, plucked from a rack of spectacular woven textiles at Jugtown in Seagrove, North Carolina.
Southern Cultures – University of North Carolina Press
Published: Jan 4, 2012
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