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Distracted by Alabama: Tangled Threads of Natural History, Local History, and Folklore

Distracted by Alabama: Tangled Threads of Natural History, Local History, and Folklore

Current price: $39.95
Publication Date: April 12th, 2022
Publisher:
University Alabama Press
ISBN:
9780817321178
Pages:
320
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Description

A gateway to Alabama for the omnivorous mind, Distracted by Alabama is a collection of twelve captivating essays about Alabama and the South by Samford University writer and scholar Jim Brown, a former president of the Alabama Folklife Association.
 
During his decades living and teaching in Alabama, Brown followed his curiosity down myriad pathways about Alabama and the region, including the state’s majestic landscape, plants and animals found nowhere else, history, and rich folkways. In the tapestry of Alabama culture, Brown traces the threads of Native American, African slave, and European settler influences, woven over the centuries into novel patterns that surprise and fascinate.  
 
Writing in the voice of a learned companion, Brown reveals insights and stories about unforgettable facets of Alabama culture, such as Sacred Harp singers and African American railroad callers, the use of handmade snares and stationary fishtraps to catch river redhorse and freshwater drum, white oak basketmaking and herbal medicine traditions, the evolution of the single-pen log cabin into the impressive two-story I-house, and a wealth of other engrossing stories.
 
An instant classic, Distracted by Alabama is a keepsake that readers who love, visit, or are curious about Alabama and Southern culture will return to again and again.
 

About the Author

James Seay Brown Jr. is emeritus professor of history at Samford University. He is author of Fairy Tales, Patriotism and the Nation-State: The Rise of the Modern West and the Response of the World and editor of Up before Daylight: Life Histories from the Alabama Writers’ Project, 1938–1939. He has served as president of the Alabama Folklife Association and remains active in academic and community life.
 

Praise for Distracted by Alabama: Tangled Threads of Natural History, Local History, and Folklore

“There is a saying, ‘Before you can think outside the box, you have to know what’s in it.’ Buried in some boxes is the folk culture of a people. That is where Russian-historian-turned-Alabama-naturalist James Seay Brown Jr. begins his journey of discovery: herb doctors, salamanders, African American railroad callers, and Sacred Harp singers, among others. Distracted by Alabama is both a celebration of the state’s bottomless box of folkways and an intellectual feast, equally adaptable to PhDs and good ol’boys and girls.”
—Wayne Flynt, author of Poor but Proud: Alabama’s Poor Whites and coauthor of Alabama: The History of a Deep South State, Bicentennial Edition
 

“Distracted by Alabama is a delightful sampler of experiences and research by Dr. James S. Brown Jr., a well-known historian from Samford University. A consummate scholar and teacher, Jim Brown reveals the long timeline of his investigations into the rich diversity of Alabama’s history, cultural traditions, and environment. The discipline of folklore has never been in Jim’s official academic job description, and yet his research has been foundational in the study of several important Alabama traditions: most notably, gandy dancer work songs of railroad line crews and a slew of practices associated with natural resources, including white oak basketry, herbalism, shoals fishtraps, and redhorse snaring. In sharing his journey, Jim Brown carries the reader on an immersive, experiential odyssey as he has done for his many fortunate students through the years.”
—Joey Brackner, former director of Alabama Center for Traditional Culture, a division of the Alabama State Council on the Arts
 

“Jim Brown’s book, Distracted by Alabama: Tangled Threads of Natural History, Local History, and Folklore, is like the Irish ballad that narrates a series of droll accidents that show why Johnny isn’t at work today. Brown, however, lists the wonders of local and natural history in Alabama that for 45 years as a professor at Samford University distracted him from turning his dissertation on Russian history into a textbook. Among the phenomena that diverted his attention were the migration of spotted salamanders, singing from The Sacred Harp, natural fishtraps and river redhorse suckers, railroad work gang callers, herbal healing, and all things Cahaba River. He immersed himself (sometimes literally) in each, then collaborated with various experts, enthusiasts, and organizations to see that they were preserved or at least remembered. Believing that history should be embedded in a broad framework encompassing geography, anthropology, arts, etc., and that the best education was experiential, he created courses which drew his students into the diverse marvels of the state. He writes, ‘Almost all my memorable successes were those that actively engaged students in problem solving and turned me into more of a guide and fellow learner than a self-proclaimed absolute source of all relevant knowledge.’ Anyone familiar with Samford University between 1971 and 2016 knows that Jim Brown was a highly respected and beloved professor. Readers of his memoir now have the opportunity to see the remarkable things he saw and people he met on his purposeful rambles through Alabama.”
—Joyce Cauthen, director emeritus, Alabama Folklife Association