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Through the Back Door: Melungeon Literacies and Twenty-First Century Technologies
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- UPDATED: 9.29.2025
- Melungeons, History, Culture
- racism, literacy, technology
author:
editor:
n/a
publisher:
date:
5.6.2009
ISBN:
9780881461503
pages:
312
notes:
contents:
description:
In the late 1890s, visionary Melungeon leader Batey Collins invited Presbyterian home missionaries to settle in Vardy, a Tennessee Melungeon community, where they established a church and built a school of unparalleled excellence. Educator-ministers Mary Rankin and Chester Leonard creatively reified the theories of theologian Walter Rauschenbusch and educational-theorists John Dewey and Maria Montessori. However, despite the missionaries' heroic efforts, school literacy did not neutralize difference.
In the twenty-first century, taking reading and writing for granted, Melungeon descendants are exploring their ethnic identity by creating websites and participating in listserv discussions. These online expressions, which provide texts for rhetorical, semiotic, and sociolinguistic analysis, illustrate not solidarity within the Melungeon community but fragmentation on issues of origins and legitimacy. Armed with literacies of difference stemming from both their natures and their social situations, Melungeons are using literacy practices to embrace the difference they cannot escape.
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CMOS:
Katherine Vande Brake. Through the Back Door: Melungeon Literacies and Twenty-First Century Technologies. 1st ed. The Melungeons: History, Culture, Ethnicity & Literature. Macon, GA: Mercer University Press, 2009.
MLA:
Other Resources
- Liberated Africans and the Abolition of the Slave Trade, 1807-1896
- Becoming Melungeon: Making an Ethnic Identity in the Appalachian South
- Voices Worth the Listening: Three Women of Appalachia
- Outwitting the Devil: Jack Tales from Wise County Virginia
- Settler Memory: The Disavowal of Indigeneity and the Politics of Race
- We Talk, You Listen: New Tribes, New Turf