|

Title page of a handmade book by Ozark artist
M.E. Oliver, 1955.
Folklore research materials have been
collected by the University Libraries from early in their history. Thanks
in part to a number of dedicated professional and amateur collectors
and promoters of Ozark folk material, Special Collections has a large
and rich array of oral, musical, and written material documenting the
life, arts, crafts, and stories of the region.
Vance Randolph, the foremost
authority on Ozark folklore, lived in Eureka Springs and Fayetteville
and influenced the collection and interpretation of Ozark Culture by
his extensive scholarly and popular writing.
Mary Celestia Parler,
a faculty member in the University of Arkansas English Department
from 1948-1975, taught the classes in folklore. She and her
students made field recordings of Ozark folksongs as well
as other Arkansas folk music and her students contributed
class reports and other field work on an extensive range of
topics in folk and popular culture.
Otto Ernest Rayburn
moved to the Ozarks in 1917. He lived in Missouri and Arkansas,
where he was a teacher, newspaper publisher, bookseller, and
promoter of tourism. Toward the end of his life he organized
his enormous hoard of information about the Ozarks into the
Ozark
Folk Encyclopedia, now in the University Libraries.
In addition to materials pertaining to these three major
figures, Special Collections holds many other
materials of potential interest for folklore research,
including a number of periodical
works past and present.
Last
modified: Tuesday, December 15, 2009
|