In Unsettling Assumptions, editors Pauline Greenhill and Diane Tye examine how tradition and gender come together to unsettle assumptions about culture and its study.

Contributors explore the ...

Buy Now From Amazon

Product Review

In Unsettling Assumptions, editors Pauline Greenhill and Diane Tye examine how tradition and gender come together to unsettle assumptions about culture and its study.

Contributors explore the intersections of traditional expressive culture and sex/gender systems to question, investigate, or upset concepts like family, ethics, and authenticity. Individual essays consider myriad topics such as Thanksgiving turkeys, rockabilly and bar fights, Chinese tales of female ghosts, selkie stories, a noisy Mennonite New Year’s celebration, the Distaff Gospels, Kentucky tobacco farmers, international adoptions, and more.

In Unsettling Assumptions, folkloric forms express but also counteract negative aspects of culture like misogyny, homophobia, and racism. But expressive culture also emerges as fundamental to our sense of belonging to a family, an occupation, or friendship group and, most notably, to identity performativity and the construction and negotiation of power.




Similar Products

Feminist Messages: CODING IN WOMEN'S FOLK CULTURE (Publications of the American Folklore Society. New Series)Feminist Theory and the Study of FolkloreThe Painted Screens of Baltimore: An Urban Folk Art Revealed (Folklore Studies in a Multicultural World Series)Cajun Women and Mardi Gras: Reading the Rules BackwardWomen's Folklore, Women's Culture (Publications of the American Folklore Society)Ways with Words: Language, Life and Work in Communities and Classrooms (Cambridge Paperback Library)The Grace of Four Moons: Dress, Adornment, and the Art of the Body in Modern India (Material Culture)Burley: Kentucky Tobacco in a New Century (Kentucky Remembered)