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Community , and: Celestial Monochord: Journal of the Institute for Astrophysics and the Hillbilly Blues , and: The Art of the Rural: Considering Rural Arts and Culture in the Twenty-First Century (review)

Community , and: Celestial Monochord: Journal of the Institute for Astrophysics and the Hillbilly... Website Review Minter, Darcy. Community. http://www .westernfolklife.org/site1/index.php/Community -landing.html (accessed May 21, 2010). Gegenhuber, Kurt. Celestial Monochord: Journal of the Institute for Astrophysics and the Hillbilly Blues. http://www.celestialmonochord .org/ (accessed May 21, 2010). Fluharty, Matthew, ed. The Art of the Rural: Considering Rural Arts and Culture in the TwentyFirst Century. http://theruralsite.blogspot.com/ (accessed May 21, 2010). Nicole Saylor University of Iowa In the almost twenty years since University of Illinois programmers first popularized the reverse-chronological list--the "What's Next" page eventually built into Netscape browsers-- blogs have grown nimble and robust enough to manage anything that anyone might want to convey. Services such as Facebook are further enhancing the blog concept with tools for sharing and communicating among friends. Frequently updated Web sites usually filled with links, news, commentary, or personal stories, blogs were once widely regarded as vehicles for personal rants. Now, a growing number of bloggers are leveraging the format's unique strengths to inform, learn, and tell stories together easily, quickly, and in compelling ways. Those interested in vernacular culture are no exception. While scholarly communication in folklore studies remains largely rooted in traditional publication models, innumerable dialogs of interest to folklorists are underway in the blogosphere. This review http://www.deepdyve.com/assets/images/DeepDyve-Logo-lg.png Journal of American Folklore American Folklore Society

Community , and: Celestial Monochord: Journal of the Institute for Astrophysics and the Hillbilly Blues , and: The Art of the Rural: Considering Rural Arts and Culture in the Twenty-First Century (review)

Journal of American Folklore , Volume 124 (491) – Jan 20, 2011

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Publisher
American Folklore Society
Copyright
Copyright © American Folklore Society
ISSN
1535-1882
Publisher site
See Article on Publisher Site

Abstract

Website Review Minter, Darcy. Community. http://www .westernfolklife.org/site1/index.php/Community -landing.html (accessed May 21, 2010). Gegenhuber, Kurt. Celestial Monochord: Journal of the Institute for Astrophysics and the Hillbilly Blues. http://www.celestialmonochord .org/ (accessed May 21, 2010). Fluharty, Matthew, ed. The Art of the Rural: Considering Rural Arts and Culture in the TwentyFirst Century. http://theruralsite.blogspot.com/ (accessed May 21, 2010). Nicole Saylor University of Iowa In the almost twenty years since University of Illinois programmers first popularized the reverse-chronological list--the "What's Next" page eventually built into Netscape browsers-- blogs have grown nimble and robust enough to manage anything that anyone might want to convey. Services such as Facebook are further enhancing the blog concept with tools for sharing and communicating among friends. Frequently updated Web sites usually filled with links, news, commentary, or personal stories, blogs were once widely regarded as vehicles for personal rants. Now, a growing number of bloggers are leveraging the format's unique strengths to inform, learn, and tell stories together easily, quickly, and in compelling ways. Those interested in vernacular culture are no exception. While scholarly communication in folklore studies remains largely rooted in traditional publication models, innumerable dialogs of interest to folklorists are underway in the blogosphere. This review

Journal

Journal of American FolkloreAmerican Folklore Society

Published: Jan 20, 2011

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