Monday, December 3, 2007

Vance Randolph Bibliography

Randolph, Vance. The A B C of Biology. New York: Vanguard Press, 1927. Signed: "Vance Randolph Oct. 24, 1952." Cochran and Luster 209. 574 R159a

_______. The A B C of Evolution. New York: Vanguard Press, 1926. Signed: "Vance Randolph Oct. 24, 1952." Cochran and Luster 207. 575 R159a

_______. The A B C of Physiology. New York: Vanguard Press, 1927. Cochran and Luster 210. 612 R159a

_______. The A B C of Psychology. New York: Vanguard Press, [1927]. Signed: "Vance Ran- dolph Oct. 24, 1952." Cochran and Luster 211. 150 R159a

_______. Autograph Albums in the Ozarks, with May Kennedy McCord. Offprint from The Journal of American Folklore 61 (Apr.-June 1948): 182-193. Offprint of Cochran and Luster 41. 398.8 R159au

_______. The Camp-Meeting Murders, with Nancy Clemens [pseud. Nancy Nance]. New York: The Vanguard Press, 1936. Signed: "Vance Randolph Oct. 24, 1952." Cochran and Luster 232. 813.52 R159ca

_______. Children's Rhymes from Missouri. Offprint from The Journal of American Folklore, Oct.-Dec. 1950, pp. 425-437. Signed: "Vance Randolph Oct. 24, 1952." Offprint of Cochran and Luster 51. 398.8 M973c

_______. The Devil's Pretty Daughter and Other Ozark Folk Tales, with notes by Herbert Halpert, ill. Glen Rounds. New York: Columbia University Press, 1955. Inscribed: "For Robertson Strawn, recalling several pleasant meetings. Vance Randolph." Cochran and Luster 73. 398.21 R159d

_______. Dialectal Survival in the Ozarks: Grammatical Peculiarities, with Patti Sankee. Offprint from American Speech 5.4 (Apr. 1930): 268-269. Offprint of Cochran and Luster 147. 427.97671 R159d

_______. Down in the Holler: A Gallery of Ozark Folk Speech, with George P. Wilson. Norman: University of Oklahoma Press, 1979, c1953. Reprint ed. of Cochran and Luster 152. 427.97671 R159do 1979

_______. Folktales from Arkansas. Offprint from The Journal of American Folklore 65.256 (Apr.- June 1951): 159-166. Signed: "Vance Randolph Oct. 24, 1952." Offprint of Cochran and Luster 57. 398.2 R159f

_______. From an Ozark Holler: Stories of Ozark Mountain Folks, ill. Richard A. Loederer. New York: The Vanguard Press, [1933]. Signed: "Vance Randolph Oct. 25, 1952." Cochran and Luster 228. 817.082 R159f

_______. Hedwig: A Novel. New York: The Vanguard Press, c1935. 2 copies in variant bindings; c.2 signed: "Vance Randolph Oct. 24, 1952." Cochran and Luster 230. 813.52 R159h

_______. Hot Springs and Hell and Other Folk Jests and Anecdotes from the Ozarks, ill. William Cechak. Hatboro, Pa.: Folklore Associates, 1965. Cochran and Luster 85. 817.082 R159h

_______. Missouri Folktales. Offprint from Midwest Folklore 1 (Summer 1952): 77-90. Offprint of Cochran and Luster 58. 398.2 R159m

_______. A Note on the Reliability of the Maze as a Method of Learning in the Angora Goat, with Walter S. Hunter. Offprint from The Pedagogical Seminary and Journal of Genetic Psychology 33.1 (Mar. 1926): 3-8. Signed: "Vance Randolph Oct. 24, 1952." Offprint of Cochran and Luster 203. 599.7358 R159h

_______. On the Seasonal Migration of Dione Vanillae in Kansas. Offprint from The Annals of the Entomological Society of America 20.2 (1927): 242-244. Signed: "Vance Randolph Oct. 24, 1952." Offprint of Cochran and Luster 213. 595.7890452 R159o

_______. An Ozark Anthology. Caldwell, Id.: The Caxton Printers, 1940. Signed: "Vance Ran- dolph Oct. 24, 1952." Cochran and Luster 19. 813.50822 R159o

_______. Ozark Folksongs. 4 vols. Columbia, Mo.: The State Historical Society of Missouri, 1946-1950. 782.42162 Oz1

_______. Ozark Magic and Folklore. New York: Dover Publications, 1964. 398.3 R159o 1964

_______. Ozark Mountain Folks. New York: The Vanguard Press, [1932]. Signed: "Vance Ran- dolph Oct. 24, 1952." Copy 3 in the Margaret E. Haughawout Collection inscribed: "To Margaret Haughawout, with thanks and all good wishes, Vance Randolph; also inscribed: "Margaret E. Haughawout Oct. 15, '32. Review copy from publisher at request of author." Cochran and Luster 7. 917.67 R159om

_______. Ozark Mountain Party Games, with Nancy Clemens [pseud. Nancy Nance]. Offprint from The Journal of American Folk-Lore 49.193 (July-Sept. 1936): [199]-206. Cochran and Luster 15. 793.2 R159o

_______. Ozark Mountain Riddles. Offprint from The Journal of American Folk-Lore 47 (Jan.- Mar. 1934): 6-89. Signed: "Vance Randolph Oct. 24, 1952." Cochran and Luster 12. 398.6 R159oz

_______. Ozark Outdoors: Hunting and Fishing Stories of the Ozarks, with Guy W. Von Schriltz. New York: Vanguard Press, 1934. Cochran and Luster 182. 799.09767 R159o

_______. Ozark Superstitions. New York: Columbia University Press, 1947. Cochran and Luster 39. 398.3 R159o

_______. The Ozarks: An American Survival of Primitive Society. New York: The Vanguard Press, [1931]. Cochran and Luster 6. 917.67 R159o

_______. Pissing in the Snow and Other Ozark Folktales, intro. Rayna Green; annotations by Frank A. Hoffman. Urbana: University of Illinois Press, c1976. Cochran and Luster 88. 398.21 R159pi

_______. Prehistoric Inhabitants of Crawford County, Kansas, with Vernon C. Allison. Offprint from The American Anthropologist 29.3 (July-Sept. 1927): 258-261. Signed: "Vance Ran- dolph Oct. 24, 1952." Offprint of Cochran and Luster 214. 978.198 Al56p

_______. Sticks in the Knapsack and Other Ozark Folk Tales, with notes by E. W. Baughman; ill. Glen Rounds. New York: Columbia University Press, 1958. Cochran and Luster 81. 398.21 R159st

_______. The Substance of the Riddle of the University by Ernst Haeckel. New York: Vanguard Press, 1926. Cochran and Luster 206. 193 H118Dr

_______. The Talking Turtle and Other Ozark Folk Tales, with notes by Herbert Halpert; ill. Glen Rounds. New York: Columbia University Press, 1957. Copy 3 inscribed: "For my old friend Robertson Strawn, with good wishes as always, Vance Randolph." Cochran and Luster 79. 398.21 R159t

_______. We Always Lie to Strangers: Tall Tales from the Ozarks, ill. Glen Rounds. New York: Columbia University Press, 1951. Cochran and Luster 53. 817.082 R159w

_______. Who Blowed Up the Church House and Other Ozark Folk Tales, with notes by Herbert Halper; ill. Glen Rounds. New York: Columbia University Press, 1952. Cochran and Luster 61. 398.21 R159w

From: http://library.pittstate.edu/spcoll/randolph01.html

Tuesday, August 14, 2007

Archives

  • The Max Hunter FolkSong Collection is an archive of almost 1600 Ozark Mountain folksongs, recorded between 1956 and 1976. A traveling salesman from Springfield, Missouri, Hunter took his reel-to-reel tape recorder into the hills and backwoods of the Ozarks, preserving the heritage of the region by recording the songs and stories of many generations of Ozark history. As important as the songs themselves are the voices of the Missouri and Arkansas folks who shared their talents and recollections with Hunter. Designed to give increased public access to this unique and invaluable resource, this site is a joint project of the Missouri State University Department of Music and the Springfield-Greene County Library in Springfield, Missouri,where the permanent collection is housed.
    The Library Center
    4653 S. Campbell
    Springfield, MO 65810-1723
    (417) 874-8110 phone
    (417) 874-8120 fax
  • Mary Celestia Parler Folksong Collection
    Special Collections- University of Arkansas Libraries
    365 N. Ozark Ave. Fayetteville, AR 72701-4002
    (479) 575-5577 phone
    (479) 575-3472 fax
  • Wolf Ozark Folksong Collection ALSO see song list
    Lyon College Regional Studies Center
    Attn: Judy Blackwell
    2300 Highland Rd. Batesville, AR 72501
    (870) 698-4330
    jblackwell@lyon.edu
  • Ozark Folk Center Archives
    Ozark Folk Center State Park
    Attn: Archive P.O. Box 500
    Mountain View, AR 72560
    (870) 269-3851
    ozarkfolkcenter@arkansas.com
  • The John Quincy Wolf Folklore Collection interested in Ozark Folklore and song form 1952-1970
  • Post Office Murals

Missouri State is host to numerous departments, collections, and centers which provide valuable resources for the study of the Ozarks.

Ozarks Country

The Ozarks, by virtue of being located where the midwest meets the south, host a blend of cultures and people not seen elsewhere. Through the years, much as been said about the Ozarks, but little has been collected online. My goal with this blog is to collect information on the internets and collect it here as a resource for myself, as I follow my own particular vision of Ozarks Studies.