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July 20, 2010
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Storytelling A Person At The Local Barbershop Tells Other Customers The Local Legend About The Famous Robbers, The Copeland Gang, Who Once Roamed The Countryside And Buried Their Gold In The Woods

Landscape: Every spring people begin to plant their vegetable gardens. Some use new innovations but many plant the same plants at the same times that their grandparents did, using the same folk knowledge.

Crafts: A Choctaw woman in one town weaves baskets from swamp cane, just as she learned from her aunt. In another town, both Anglo-American and African-American women quilt, showing their granddaughters how to cut the cloth.

Traditions and Customs: Every fourth of July, a whole town gets together and holds a fish fry. The men always fry the fish and the children get to make homemade ice cream.

Spotting folklife

Although we all belong to groups that share history and culture, not all culture is folklife. For instance, almost all kids and teenagers know a lot about the Mighty Morphin Power Rangers. This, however, is not folklife. How can you tell when something is folklife? One way to think of folklife is to compare how we learn the things we know. In general, folklorists talk about three kinds of culture: elite, popular, and folk. Elite culture includes things you learn formally, through books and school, such as math and karate. Popular culture includes things you learn about through the media: television, radio, and comic books. Folk culture includes things you learn from your family or community. Look at the comparisons below:Elite Popular Folk
Music symphony
orchestra  Madonna
Alan Jackson traditional
gospel 
Storytelling Legend of Sleepy Hollow in a Textbook Goosebumps horror stories and TV shows Stories of hidden Civil War gold  Your traditions With this information about folklife, you can explore the traditions, customs, and beliefs that belong to you, your family, friends, and neighbors. Regional Folklife You and Your Neighbors Sometimes people who live in the same area have many things in common: what they do for a living, what kinds of foods they eat, or even what churches they go to. Some of these things are determined by the environment.

For instance, people who don't live near marsh areas where palmetto grows won't learn to weave baskets from palmetto; they'll make baskets from cane, maybe, or split white oak. People who live on the prairies won't learn to cut and stack timber or how to build log cabins. Those skills, however, will be important in places where there are lots of trees. When people from a geographic area have enough shared culture, we say they have a regional folklife.
Mississippi Regions Mississippi has several geographic regions that have similar but distinct histories. Although people disagree about just which regions exist in Mississippi, most people agree on the Delta, the Gulf Coast, the Hills, the Tennessee-Tombigbee region, and the Pine Hills (also called Piney Woods).

Most of us in the state share in a general Mississippi folk culture that includes Civil War legends or stories about slavery days, or even such state traditions as the annual Miss Mississippi contest. Mississippians also share much with people throughout the South, especially in the kinds of foods we eat, gardening, religious beliefs, and valuing family ties. But even as we're alike in some ways, each region varies a little. For example, commercial fishing and steamboat stories are important along the Mississippi River, while commercial shrimping is important to people on the Gulf Coast. Here in the Pine Hills, however, fishing is mostly recreational, and people aren't likely to weave cast nets. Telling fishing lies (or whoppers), however, seems to be part of everyone's folklore!

The Pine Hills Region
The Pine Hills region of Mississippi is the area once dominated by longleaf pine trees. The Pine Hills lie south of Interstate 20, north of Interstate 10 and east of the Natchez Trace. The Pine Hills area of the U.S. South actually begins in Georgia and extends in a continuous line to south Louisiana. Another Pine Hills region goes from northern Louisiana into east Texas. People in Mississippi sometimes call this area the Pine Woods or the Pine Belt. Native Americans have lived in this region for more than 10,000 years. Not many people of European descent settled in this area until after the Civil War. There were few slaves in the region. Most African Americans came here to work for the railroads or in lumber camps. While people in the Delta had plantations and people in the Hills region had mid-sized farms, and people on the Gulf Coast fished, the early Pine Hills settlers were mostly herders (cattle, pigs, and even some sheep in the beginning). Other big industries were timber and the railroads. People who live here share this history of the region. Today the mostly rural region includes parts of 32 counties and roughly 800,000 residents. According to the 1990 U.S. Census, a majority of residents are Anglo- Americans, with a very large minority of African Americans and small numbers of other ethnic groups. The area has Greeks, Germans, Lebanese, Syrians, Jews, Vietnamese, and other immigrants who have settled in the region. Most of the region's residents, whatever their race or ethnic group, are Christian Protestants, with significant numbers of Catholics and some Jewish residents. A few towns are noteworthy for their minority religious faiths, including Islamic and Mennonite communities.

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Latest news about Civil Rights cases in Tennessee and nationwide:

Overton County Sheriff’s Officers Sentenced For Violating Inmate’s Civil Rights
The former Sheriff’s Jail Administrator in Overton County, Tenn., Michael Gilpatrick, and former Lieutenant James Loftis were sentenced today for t...
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Civil Rights Commission Urges S. 147 Rejection
WASHINGTON, DC – The United States Commission on Civil Rights today urged the U.S. Congress to reject the Native Hawaiian Government Reorganization...
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The Copeland Gang, Who Once Roamed The Countryside And Buried Their Gold In The Woods
Landscape: Every spring people begin to plant their vegetable gardens. Some use new innovations but many plant the same plants at the same times th...
Read more >


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Discrimination against Persons with Disabilities

Definition:
A person with a disability is defined as one who has a physical or mental impairment that substantially limits one or more of such person's major life activities, has a record of such impairment, or is regarded as having such an impairment.

Affirmative Action Plans/Affirmative Employment Plan

Definition:
Written plans for programs required by Executive Order 11478 and other laws and regulations. AAP's may contain studies, which show how the work force at the activity has been used, and may include goals and timetables for increasing the representation of women, minorities, and persons with disabilities in those areas where they have been underrepresented.

Employment agency

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Means any person regularly undertakingwith or without compensation to procure employees for an employer or to procure for employees opportunities to work for an employer and includes an agent of such a person.

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Tennessee Civil-Right Attorney

 
If you live in the following cities and need an Civil-Right attorney you should contact our Civil-Right Attorney as soon as possible:

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  • Bristol
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  • Clarksville
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  • Clinton
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  • Gallatin
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  • Nashville
  • Oak Ridge
  • Shelbyville
  • Smyrna
  • Soddy Daisy
  • Springfield
  • Tullahoma
 


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