Representations of African American Quiltmaking: From Omission to High Art
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Date
2009
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American Folklore Society and the University of Illinois Press
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Abstract
African American quiltmaking began to gain recognition as an expressive form distinct from European American quiltmaking in the countercultural climate of the 1970s. Representations of it since then have served to update the Eurocentric, patriotic image of quiltmaking in the United States with components of multiculturalism and cultural critique. These representations in turn caused tensions along the lines of class, race, gender, and scholarly discipline. This study shows the power of words and things when used together, as in museum exhibits, to affirm or challenge the existing social order.
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Keywords
quilt; African American; folklore studies; material culture; exhibition
Citation
Teri Klassen (2009) “Representations of African American Quiltmaking: From Omission to High Art.” Journal of American Folklore. 122(485):297-33.
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© 2009 by the Board of Trustees of the University of Illinois. Circulated under the terms of the American Folklore Society's author's rights policy.
http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/pub/1145/en//, accessed July 19, 2012.
http://www.sherpa.ac.uk/romeo/pub/1145/en//, accessed July 19, 2012.
Type
Article