First published in 1937, Hounds on the Mountain evokes James Still's
personal experiences of eastern Kentucky through reflective folk poems
describing Appalachian mountain life from birth through death. Written
during the Great Depression, the collection emphasizes a collective
reliance on the earth and the primacy of nature that Still observed
from the seclusion of his thirty-acre home in Knott County, Kentucky.
Still, who became known as the "Dean of Appalachian Literature,"
describes the changing landscape of his community as a tale of
personal and environmental erosion. As the poet pleads for his readers
to better protect this fragile ecosphere, he plants the seeds for his
rise to literary eminence. Still's focus on the self-made authenticity
of regional community artisans also reminded American readers during
the Great Depression that local economies needed support, the same as
those at the national and global levels. Hounds on the Mountain allows
today's audiences to appreciate Still's first published book as both
literature and as a treasured cultural symbol of Appalachian life then
and now.
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Poems
Product details
ISBN
9781950564248
Published
2022
Publisher
University Press of Kentucky
Language
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Author