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E-raamat: Wait Five Minutes: Weatherlore in the Twenty-First Century

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  • Formaat: 324 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-May-2023
  • Kirjastus: University Press of Mississippi
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781496844392
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  • Formaat: 324 pages
  • Ilmumisaeg: 18-May-2023
  • Kirjastus: University Press of Mississippi
  • Keel: eng
  • ISBN-13: 9781496844392

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Contributions by Emma Frances Bloomfield, Sheila Bock, Kristen Bradley, Hannah Chapple, James Deutsch, Máirt Hanley, Christine Hoffmann, Kate Parker Horigan, Shelley Ingram, John Laudun, Jordan Lovejoy, Lena Marander-Eklund, Jennifer Morrison, Willow G. Mullins, Anne Pryor, Todd Richardson, and Claire Schmidt

The weather governs our lives. It fills gaps in conversations, determines our dress, and influences our architecture. No matter how much our lives may have moved indoors, no matter how much we may rely on technology, we still monitor the weather. Wait Five Minutes: Weatherlore in the Twenty-First Century draws from folkloric, literary, and scientific theory to offer up new ways of thinking about this most ancient of phenomena.

Weatherlore is a concept that describes the folk beliefs and traditions about the weather that are passed down casually among groups of people. Weatherlore can be predictive, such as the belief that more black than brown fuzz on a woolly bear caterpillar signals a harsh winter. It can be the familiar commentary that eases daily social interactions, such as asking, "Is it hot (or cold) enough for you?" Other times, it is simply ubiquitous: "If you dont like the weather, wait five minutes and it will change." From detailing personal experiences at picnics and suburban lawns to critically analyzing storm stories, novels, and flood legends, contributors offer engaging multidisciplinary perspectives on weatherlore.

As we move further into the twenty-first century, an increasing awareness of climate change and its impacts on daily life calls for a folkloristic reckoning with the weather and a rising need to examine vernacular understandings of weather and climate. Weatherlore helps us understand and shape global political conversations about climate change and biopolitics at the same time that it influences individual, group, and regional lives and identities. We use weather, and thus its folklore, to make meaning of ourselves, our groups, and, quite literally, our world.
Acknowledgments xi
Introduction: And Now, the Weather xiii
Section I Belief
Introduction: The Sky Is Telling It
3(7)
Chapter 1 Divergent Weatherlore in Christian Hermeneutics: Climate Change and Vernacular Rhetoric in Our Current Environmental Crisis
10(18)
Emma Frances Bloomfield
Sheila Bock
Chapter 2 "Of Biblical Proportions": Flood Motifs in Personal Narratives of Katrina Survivors
28(15)
Kate Parker Horigan
Chapter 3 In the Bones: Prognostication and Weather in the Twenty-First Century
43(16)
Willow C. Mullins
Chapter 4 Contrails to Chemtrails: Atmospheric Scientists Respond to Challenging Belief Narratives
59(19)
Anne Pryor
Chapter 5 From Clockwork Weatherman to Atomic Environmentalist
78(21)
Mairt Hanley
Section II Text
Introduction: The Romance of the Weather
99(5)
Chapter 6 "The World of Sensible Seasons Had Come Undone": Climate Change and Regional Folklore in Barbara Kingsolver's Flight Behavior
104(18)
Hannah Chappie
Chapter 7 Early Modern Special Snowflakes
122(22)
Christine Hoffmann
Chapter 8 Mothering the Storm: Black Girlhood and Communal Care in Literature of Katrina
144(16)
Jennifer Morrison
Shelley Ingram
Chapter 9 "You Don't Need a Weatherman": Bob Dylan's Windlore
160(16)
James I. Deutsch
Chapter 10 "I'll Never Forget the Thunderstorm of 1960, I Think It Was": Storm Stories
176(23)
Lena Marander-Eklund
Section III Tradition
Introduction: Feeding the Storm
199(6)
Chapter 11 Framing the Flood: Strategic Environmental Storytelling in Appalachia
205(21)
Jordan Lovejoy
Chapter 12 Weathering the Storm: Folk Ideas about Character
226(22)
John Laudun
Chapter 13 It Always Rains on a Picnic: Weatherlore and Community Narrative at St. Patrick's Irish Picnic and Homecoming
248(13)
Kristen Bradley
Chapter 14 The Folk Wisdom of Lawns
261(15)
Todd Richardson
Chapter 15 Canning for the Apocalypse: Climate Change, Zombies, and the Early Twenty-First-Century Canning Renaissance
276(15)
Claire Schmidt
About the Contributors 291(6)
Index 297
Shelley Ingram is assistant professor of English at the University of Louisiana at Lafayette. Her essays have appeared in such edited collections and journals as African American Review and Food & Foodways. She is currently editor of the Louisiana Folklore Miscellany and coauthor with Willow G. Mullins and Todd Richardson of Implied Nowhere: Absence in Folklore Studies, published by University Press of Mississippi.

Willow G. Mullins is a lecturer in Celtic and Scottish studies at the University of Edinburgh. She is author of Felt and coauthor with Shelley Ingram and Todd Richardson of Implied Nowhere: Absence in Folklore Studies, published by University Press of Mississippi.