Both Sides of the Border: A Scattering of Texas Folklore


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Editor: Francis Edward Abernethy
Hardcover Price: $29.95
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Hardcover ISBN-13: 9781574411843
Hardcover ISBN-10: 1574411845
Physical Description: 6 x 9. 344 pp. 40 illus. Index.
Publication Date: November 2004
Series: Publications of the Texas Folklore Society | Volume: 61
Annotation:

Both Sides of the Border: A Scattering of Texas Folklore is now available as a free e-book at the UNT Digital Library. Use of this item is restricted to the UNT Community.

Texas has a large population who has lived on both sides of the border and created a folkloric mix that makes Texas unique. Both Sides of the Border gets its name from its emphasis on recently researched Tex-Mex folklore. But we recognize that Texas has other borders besides the Rio Grande. We use that title with the folklorist’s knowledge that all of this state’s songs, tales, and traditions have lived and prospered on the other sides of Texas borders at one time or another before they crossed the rivers and became “ours.”

Chapters are organized thematically, and include favorite storytellers like James Ward Lee, Thad Sitton, and Jerry Lincecum. Lee’s beloved “Hell is for He-Men” appears here, along with Sitton’s informative essay on Texas freedman’s settlements. Both Sides of the Border contains something to delight everyone interested in Texas folklore.

About Author:

FRANCIS EDWARD ABERNETHY was Regents Professor Emeritus of English at Stephen F. Austin State University, the executive secretary and editor of the Texas Folklore Society, the curator of exhibits for the East Texas Historical Association, and a member of the Texas Institute of Letters. In addition to editing twenty-one Texas Folklore Society publications, he wrote Singin' Texas, Legends of Texas’ Heroic Age, and all three volumes of the Texas Folklore Society history, published by the University of North Texas Press.

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