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Interviews and Reflections / Entrevues et réflexions

No. 90-91 (2020): Special Issue - Storied Spaces: Renewing Folkloristic Perspectives on Vernacular Architecture

Michael Ann Williams

  • Michael J. Chiarappa
  • Gabrielle A. Berlinger
Submitted
April 18, 2021
Published
2021-04-19

References

  1. Berlinger, Gabrielle. 2017. Framing Sukkot: Tradition and Transformation in Jewish Vernacular Architecture. Bloomington: Indiana University Press.
  2. Bucuvalas, Tina. 2019. The Tarpon Springs Greektown Traditional Cultural District: The National Register Nomination and the Battle of the Sponge Docks. Journal of American Folklore 132 (526): 452-71.
  3. Bulger, Peggy. 2003. Looking Back, Moving Forward: The Development of Folklore as a Public Profession (AFS Presidential Plenary Address, 2002). Journal of American Folklore 116 (462): 377-90.
  4. Carter, Thomas. 2015. Building Zion: The Material World of Mormon Settlement. Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press.
  5. Glassie, Henry. 1975. Folk Housing in Middle Virginia: A Structural Analysis of Historic Artifacts. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
  6. Hunt, Marjorie, and Paul Wagner, dir. 1984. The Stone Carvers. Washington: Smithsonian Institution Office of Folklife Programs.
  7. Hunt, Marjorie, and Paul Wagner, dir. 2018. Good Work: Masters of the Building Arts. Washington: Smithsonian Center for Folklife and Cultural Heritage.
  8. Martin, Charles. 1984. Hollybush: Folk Building and Social Change in an Appalachian Community. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press
  9. McDaniel, George. 1982. Hearth and Home: Preserving a People’s Culture. Philadelphia: Temple University Press.
  10. Sciorra, Joseph. 2015. Built with Faith: Italian American Imagination and Catholic Material Culture in New York City. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
  11. Williams, Michael Ann. 1991. Homeplace: The Social Use and Meaning of the Folk Dwelling in Southwestern North Carolina. Athens: The University Press of Georgia.
  12. Williams, Michael Ann. 2017. After the Revolution: Folklore, History, and the Future of Our Discipline (AFS Presidential Plenary Address, 2015). Journal of American Folklore 130 (516): 129-41.