Mode of Program Participation

Academic Scholarship

Participation Type

Reading

Session Abstract or Summary

The “I” in Appalachia: A Dual Assessment of Contemporary Memoirs from a Misunderstood Place

To be Appalachian means many things, and to be from Appalachia means just as many more. The only way to earn a sense of Appalachia is to invest in firsthand accounts of those who live there, as well as those who left. I left. My younger brother stayed. When we talk to one another about Appalachia, or our hometown within it, we argue over widely held cultural beliefs about the region and the way it is often portrayed in popular culture, or discussed in the national media. In an attempt to come to terms with our conflicting beliefs about the region, we have identified a number of contemporary memoirs by Appalachian authors, such as Walls' The Glass Castle, Vance's Hillbilly Elegy, and Mann's Edge: Travels of an Appalachian Leather Bear. We will individually evaluate each memoir for Appalachian representation, clichés, cultural truths, and what each memoir adds to the cultural milieu. We will compare impressions of each memoir, and decide whether or not each one confirms or changes the convictions of the one who stayed and experiences Appalachia daily, or the one who left and studies it from afar. Essentially, we are weighing the individual opinions of an idealistic girl who left and became a humanities professor, and an idealistic boy who stayed, skipped college, and runs a gun store in the pill mill capital of the world.

Presentation #1 Title

The “I” in Appalachia: A Dual Assessment of Contemporary Memoirs from a Misunderstood Place

Presentation #1 Abstract or Summary

To be Appalachian means many things, and to be from Appalachia means just as many more. The only way to earn a sense of Appalachia is to invest in firsthand accounts of those who live there, as well as those who left. I left. My younger brother stayed. When we talk to one another about Appalachia, or our hometown within it, we argue over widely held cultural beliefs about the region and the way it is often portrayed in popular culture, or discussed in the national media. In an attempt to come to terms with our conflicting beliefs about the region, we have identified a number of contemporary memoirs by Appalachian authors, such as Walls' The Glass Castle, Vance's Hillbilly Elegy, and Mann's Edge: Travels of an Appalachian Leather Bear. We will individually evaluate each memoir for Appalachian representation, clichés, cultural truths, and what each memoir adds to the cultural milieu. We will compare impressions of each memoir, and decide whether or not each one confirms or changes the convictions of the one who stayed and experiences Appalachia daily, or the one who left and studies it from afar. Essentially, we are weighing the individual opinions of an idealistic girl who left and became a humanities professor, and an idealistic boy who stayed, skipped college, and runs a gun store in the pill mill capital of the world.

At-A-Glance Bio- Presenter #1

Amanda Page

Assistant Professor

Mount Carmel College of Nursing

Amanda Page teaches writing and humanities courses to nursing students at a single purpose institution. She earned an MFA in creative writing from the University of Alabama, and holds a Bachelor of Specialized Studies in Writing & Women’s History from Ohio University. She writes about sense of place, personal finance, and the art of the personal essay for various print and online publications. Born and raised in southern Ohio, she now makes her home in Columbus, Ohio.

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The “I” in Appalachia: A Dual Assessment of Contemporary Memoirs from a Misunderstood Place

To be Appalachian means many things, and to be from Appalachia means just as many more. The only way to earn a sense of Appalachia is to invest in firsthand accounts of those who live there, as well as those who left. I left. My younger brother stayed. When we talk to one another about Appalachia, or our hometown within it, we argue over widely held cultural beliefs about the region and the way it is often portrayed in popular culture, or discussed in the national media. In an attempt to come to terms with our conflicting beliefs about the region, we have identified a number of contemporary memoirs by Appalachian authors, such as Walls' The Glass Castle, Vance's Hillbilly Elegy, and Mann's Edge: Travels of an Appalachian Leather Bear. We will individually evaluate each memoir for Appalachian representation, clichés, cultural truths, and what each memoir adds to the cultural milieu. We will compare impressions of each memoir, and decide whether or not each one confirms or changes the convictions of the one who stayed and experiences Appalachia daily, or the one who left and studies it from afar. Essentially, we are weighing the individual opinions of an idealistic girl who left and became a humanities professor, and an idealistic boy who stayed, skipped college, and runs a gun store in the pill mill capital of the world.