Kirjailija
Simon J. Bronner
Kirjat ja teokset yhdessä paikassa: 23 kirjaa, julkaisuja vuosilta 1986-2025, suosituimpien joukossa Steelton. Vertaile teosten hintoja ja tarkista saatavuus suomalaisista kirjakaupoista.
Mukana myös kirjoitusasut: Simon J Bronner
23 kirjaa
Kirjojen julkaisuhaarukka 1986-2025.
Folklore. Washington Irving and Mark Twain used it in their fiction; Sigmund Freud and William James incorporated it into their work; Henry Ford and Franklin Roosevelt promoted it. Their efforts were set against the background of folklorists who brought collections of traditional tales, songs, and crafts to the attention of a modernizing society. The ideas of these folklorists influenced how Americans thought about the character of their society and the directions it was taking. Here for the first time is a history of American folkloristic ideas and the figures who shaped them. Simon Bronner puts these ideas in cultural context, showing the interconnection of folklore studies with historical events, social changes, and intellectual movements. He follows the beginnings of American folklore studies in the antiquarian literature of the 1830s through the rise of folklore societies in the 1880s to the emergence of an independent discipline in the 1950s. In this progression, Bronner identifies several major themes tying folklore studies to intellectual history: first, the unearthing of a hidden, usable past; second, the charting of time and space; and third, the structuring of communication. More than a chronological or biographical history, this book is an interpretation of folkloristic ideas and their relationship to American society.
Popularizing Pennsylvania - Henry W. Shoemaker and the Progressive Uses of Folklore and History
Simon J. Bronner
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A fascinating biography of America’s first state folklorist and a pioneer of national conservation. "Simon J. Bronner’s biography of Henry Wharton Shoemaker is an important examination of an individual’s contributions to the cultural preservation movement. Shoemaker was the first state-appointed folklorist in America, Pennsylvania being the first state to establish such a position. How he came to that honor and his influence on cultural conservation is an exciting narrative. . . . This book contains an excellent explanation of folklore scholarship for the lay audience. It also forced acknowledgment of the interdependence of the academy and the public sector."—The Public Historian Few regions have had as energetic and influential a promoter as Henry W. Shoemaker (1880-1958), who devoted his life’s work to preserving Pennsylvania's cultural and natural heritage. His memory lives on in the legends he helped promote, such as that of the Indian princess "Nita-Nee," for whom Central Pennsylvania’s Nittany Mountain is supposedly named. He was also instrumental in creating Pennsylvania’s noted system of parks and forests and the Pennsylvania Historical and Museum Commission. In his own day, Shoemaker was a controversial figure, talked about for his immense wealth, powerful connections, eccentric hobbies, and, above all, his consuming passion for conserving and promoting Pennsylvania’s wildlife, mountains, and common folk. During the Progressive Era, he fell in with national leaders such as Theodore Roosevelt and Gifford Pinchot, who encouraged Americans to commune with nature and to appreciate its history and legend. He espoused the Progressive belief that nature and folk cultures held vital, even spiritual, powers for a modern age, especially in America, where Shoemaker hoped to create a mythology supporting nationalism. Shoemaker hoped to "sell Pennsylvania to Pennsylvanians" and instill an appreciation for the state’s wilderness, threatened by industrialization. He authored hundreds of pamphlets and books on nature, history, and folklore. He was publisher of several influential newspapers in Pennsylvania, including the Altoona Tribune and the Reading Eagle. He became the first state folklorist in America, one of the first chairs of the Pennsylvania Historical Commission, and an influential member of the State Forest Commission and the State Geographic Board. He is responsible for the network of historical markers that dot the byways of the Commonwealth. For this book, the first full-length biography of Shoemaker, Simon Bronner has located never-before-available private papers and interviewed many people who knew Shoemaker. Included are rare photographs and a sampler of Shoemaker stories.