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Full-Text Articles in Arts and Humanities
Wvrhc Newsletter, Fall/Winter 1990, West Virginia & Regional History Center
Wvrhc Newsletter, Fall/Winter 1990, West Virginia & Regional History Center
West Virginia & Regional History Center Newsletters
Window Glass Cutters League Records Now Open for Research
Wvrhc Newsletter, Summer 1990, West Virginia & Regional History Center
Wvrhc Newsletter, Summer 1990, West Virginia & Regional History Center
West Virginia & Regional History Center Newsletters
West Virginia Day 1990 &
Excellence Through Equity
Allen Eaton And The Department Of Art And Social Work: Social Work In The Appalachian Arts And Crafts Movement1, Roger A. Lohmann
Allen Eaton And The Department Of Art And Social Work: Social Work In The Appalachian Arts And Crafts Movement1, Roger A. Lohmann
Faculty & Staff Scholarship
This paper explores a singular chapter in Social Work, Appalachia and
American culture. Like many other aspects of Appalachian culture and politics, it is
primarily a tale of extended effort for what proved to be a lost cause. Like many
other chapters in the history of the social work profession, it is a tale of a bright
beginning and insufficient follow-through. It is an optimistic narrative of expected
and unanticipated consequences that have proven to be beneficial for the culture
and economy of the region. It is also a deeply political narrative, if only because it is
dramatically at variance …
Wvrhc Newsletter, Spring 1990, West Virginia & Regional History Center
Wvrhc Newsletter, Spring 1990, West Virginia & Regional History Center
West Virginia & Regional History Center Newsletters
Physician's Daybook Documents Antebellum Medicine in Randolph County
Four Perspectives On Appalachian Culture And Poverty, Roger A. Lohmann
Four Perspectives On Appalachian Culture And Poverty, Roger A. Lohmann
Faculty & Staff Scholarship
Poverty is as closely associated with the Appalachian region as coal mining and the hammer dulcimer. Appalachian poverty has seldom been portrayed simply as poverty, but as the expression and symbol of something larger. Images of poverty - poorly dressed, sooty, emaciated, barefooted, mostly white, rural children and adults beside cabin porches - are as closely associated with Appalachia as cowboy hats with the West or moss-covered trees and white-columned mansions with the Old South.