Research Catalog
Ghost dancing on the cracker circuit : the culture of festivals in the American South
- Title
- Ghost dancing on the cracker circuit : the culture of festivals in the American South / Rodger Lyle Brown.
- Author
- Brown, Rodger Lyle.
- Publication
- Jackson : University Press of Mississippi, ©1997.
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Status | Format | Access | Call Number | Item Location |
---|---|---|---|---|
Text | Use in library | GT4806 .B76 1997 | Off-site |
Details
- Description
- xxiii, 204 pages : illustrations; 24 cm
- Summary
- From the Back Cover: A look into deep communal meanings that emerge as small towns stage their annual festivals. Everybody knows about community festivals that celebrate the good ol' days-events like Rattlesnake Roundup, Peanut Days, and Mule Day. Countless towns around the South stage them. They set aside one weekend a year, rope off some parking, and celebrate some local theme on the courthouse lawn or in a nearby pasture, touting lost days of imagined glory. The phenomenon is rapidly proliferating across the region, but until now the deeper significance of these hometown events has not been explored. In Ghost Dancing on the Cracker Circuit Rodger Brown takes the reader on a road trip across the South. He visits many festivals and unweaves their webs to find the meaning that lies beneath. Instead of merry times of celebration and fund-raising, Brown discerns signs of mourning. Behind the scrim of jolly sideshows he finds communities responding to economic restructuring and cultural change. As he travels across the South, he absorbs vivid impressions of boosterism and cornball symbolism. Along this comical trail that he terms the "cracker circuit" he perceives how these seasonal events are staged by white sponsors attempting to resurrect a splendid past that actually never existed. He likens them to legendary Indians "ghost dancing" in ceremonial performances staged to conjure up a lost paradise. Brown's adventurous, good-natured inspection of this pervasive cultural curiosity discloses the state of the South at the turn of the millennium.
- Subject
- Bibliography (note)
- Includes bibliographical references and index.
- Contents
- Acknowledgments -- Introduction -- Chapter 1: Stuffing sin in a lard bucket: rattlesnake roundup at Whigham, Georgia -- Chapter 2: History's all we have left: the tobacco festival (Clarkton, North Carolina), swine time (Climax, Georgia), and the banana festival (South Fulton, Tennessee) -- Chapter 3: Honoring the Cob: hillbilly days at Pikeville, Kentucky -- Chapter 4: This year's Hernando: De Soto celebration at Bradenton, Florida -- Chapter 5: Destiny in Dayton: Scopes Trial play and festival at Dayton, Tennessee -- Chapter 6: Hey, Barney; hey, Andy: mule day at Calvary, Georgia -- Chapter 7: Aunt Bee's death certificate: Mayberry days at Mount Airy, North Carolina -- Bibliography -- Index.
- ISBN
- 0878059059
- 9780878059058
- 0878059067
- 9780878059065
- LCCN
- 96017962
- OCLC
- ocm35174718
- 35174718
- SCSB-2111602
- Owning Institutions
- Princeton University Library