Death and Dying in Central Appalachia: Changing Attitudes and PracticesUniversity of Illinois Press, 1994 - 247 pages In Death and Dying in Central Appalachia, James Crissman explores cultural traits related to death and dying in the Appalachian sections of Tennessee, Virginia, Kentucky, North Carolina, and West Virginia, showing how they have changed since the 1600's. Relying on archival materials, almost forty photographs, and interviews with more than 400 mountain dwellers, Crissman focuses on the importance of familism and 'neighborliness' in mountain society. |
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Page 185
... miners lived segregat- ed lives . Each group had its own church , school , and housing area , and seldom socialized with any other group . The miners did die together , however . Although people associate coal mining deaths with native ...
... miners lived segregat- ed lives . Each group had its own church , school , and housing area , and seldom socialized with any other group . The miners did die together , however . Although people associate coal mining deaths with native ...
Page 191
... mining deaths . When electricity was first installed in mines , a lack of re- gard for safety often resulted in electrocution when a worker came in contact with a " live " wire . There was , and still is , the inevitable rock slide or ...
... mining deaths . When electricity was first installed in mines , a lack of re- gard for safety often resulted in electrocution when a worker came in contact with a " live " wire . There was , and still is , the inevitable rock slide or ...
Page 197
... miners and helpers down the rail- road track to the company store where relatives could claim them and have them shipped to their destinations.35 The coffins of deceased miners were generally constructed by a neighbor or someone in the ...
... miners and helpers down the rail- road track to the company store where relatives could claim them and have them shipped to their destinations.35 The coffins of deceased miners were generally constructed by a neighbor or someone in the ...
Contents
Familism Neighborliness and the Death Watch | 9 |
Preparation of the Body | 22 |
Burial Receptacles and Grave Digging | 42 |
Copyright | |
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Death and Dying in Central Appalachia: Changing Attitudes and Practices James K. Crissman Limited preview - 1994 |
Common terms and phrases
afterdamp American Funeral Directing Appalachian Heritage ballads became Blue Sky Boys body Bradley Kincaid's Brothers burial receptacle buried Cades Cove Carter Family casket central Appalachia century ceremony Charles Guiteau church clothes coal dust coffin constructed corpse County cremation Death and Dying death watch deceased died early East Tennessee East Tennessee Dead elderly embalming explosion family cemetery family members flowers friends funeral director funeral home funeral service gathered Gilmer County grave markers graveyard ground Habenstein and Lamers hair headstones hearse heaven Hills History of American History of Thanatology Ibid interment interviews Kentucky Kincaid living loved methane miners mining minister mother moun mountain mourners mourning murder ballads neighborliness neighbors neral night North Carolina occasionally person photograph placed portrait preachers Press quilt reissued relatives sermon settlers singing social someone sometimes songs Southern Highlander tains Thanatology tion usually vaults Vernon Dalhart W.Va wake West Virginia woman York