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Interviews and Reflections / Entrevues et réflexions

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

Gerald L. Pocius

  • Meghann E. Jack
Submitted
April 18, 2021
Published
2021-04-19

References

  1. Buchli, Victor. 2002. Architecture and the Domestic Sphere. In The Material Culture Reader, ed. Victor Buchli, 207-13. Oxford: Berg.
  2. Carter Thomas. 2013. Where Did the Folklorists Go?: Folklore, History, and the Study of Vernacular Architecture. Folklore Historian 29: 34-55.
  3. Evans, E. Estyn. 1967. Mourne Country: Landscape and Life in South Down. 2nd ed. Dundalk: Dundalgan Press.
  4. Glassie, Henry. 1968. Pattern in the Material Folk Culture of the Eastern United States. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
  5. Glassie, Henry. 1975. Folk Housing in Middle Virginia: A Structural Analysis of Historic Artifacts. Knoxville: University of Tennessee Press.
  6. Glassie, Henry. 1982. Passing the Time in Ballymenone: Culture and History of an Ulster Community. Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press.
  7. Herman, Bernard L. 1992. The Stolen House. Charlottesville: University of Virginia Press.
  8. Pocius, Gerald L. 1975. The Place of Burial: Spatial Focus of Contact of the Living With the Dead in Eastern Areas of the Avalon Peninsula of Newfoundland. MA thesis, Memorial University of Newfoundland.
  9. Pocius, Gerald L. 1976. “The First Time that I Thought of It Since I Got Wed”: Role Expectations and Singer Status in a Newfoundland Outport. Western Folklore 35 (2): 109-22.
  10. Pocius, Gerald L. 1979. Textile Traditions of Eastern Newfoundland. Canadian Centre for Folk Culture Studies Paper 29. Ottawa: National Museum of Man.
  11. Pocius, Gerald L. 1991. A Place to Belong: Community Order and Everyday Space in Calvert, Newfoundland. Athens: University of Georgia Press.
  12. Redfield, Robert. 1955. The Little Community: Viewpoints for the Study of a Human World. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  13. Roberts, Warren. 1972. Folk Architecture. In Folklore and Folklife: An Introduction, ed. Richard M. Dorson, 281-93. Chicago: University of Chicago Press.
  14. St. George, Robert Blair. 1988 [1985]. Artifacts of Regional Consciousness in the Connecticut River Valley, 1700-1780. In Material Life in America, 1600-1860, ed. Robert Blair St. George, 335-56. Boston: Northeastern University Press.