312 pages, 6.125 x 9.25, 18 color plates, 15 halftones, notes, bibliography, index

BUY

Selected Press

Book Riot: New November Non-Fiction

Southern Review of Books: The Best Southern Books of November 2022

The Food Section: “Stradling the Slaw Line”

West Virginia Public Broadcasting: “New Book Explores History of West Virginia Hot Dogs”

Interview with Tom Martin of WEKU’s Eastern Standard

BELT Magazine: Wild and Wonderful Folklore of West Virginia”

Nashville Scene/Chapter 16: “Traditions Are Elastic: Making Our Future Offers Visionary Folklore of Appalachia”

The Daily Yonder: Interview: Emily Hilliard

Ancillary Review: “Hot Dogs and Fallout76: Review of Making Our Future

Read a version of Chapter 4: “Something Deeply Rooted: The Invisible Landscape of Breece D’J Pancake’s Milton, West Virginia” in Oxford American

Read an excerpt from the conclusion via Southern Cultures

Listen to a Making Our Future companion playlist via Largehearted Boy

 Drawing from her work as state folklorist, Emily Hilliard explores contemporary folklife in West Virginia and challenges the common perception of both folklore and Appalachian culture as static, antiquated forms, offering instead the concept of "visionary folklore" as a future-focused, materialist, and collaborative approach to cultural work.

With chapters on the expressive culture of the West Virginia teachers' strike, the cultural significance of the West Virginia hot dog, the tradition of independent pro wrestling in Appalachia, the practice of nonprofessional women songwriters, the collective counternarrative of a multiracial coal camp community, the invisible landscape of writer Breece D'J Pancake's hometown, the foodways of an Appalachian Swiss community, the postapocalyptic vision presented in the video game Fallout 76, and more, the book centers the collective nature of folklife and examines the role of the public folklorist in collaborative engagements with communities and culture. Hilliard argues that folklore is a unifying concept that puts diverse cultural forms in conversation, as well as a framework that helps us reckon with the past, understand the present, and collectively shape the future.

Praise for Making Our Future:

"A benchmark in public folklore. Hilliard's ability to weave together many voices has given us a work that expands the horizons of critical heritage work to encompass hot dog condiments, wrestling matches, and teachers' strikes, calling attention to community life itself as the object of cultural stewardship." —Mary Hufford, Ohio State University and the Livelihoods Knowledge Exchange Network

"West Virginia has long deserved a book like Hilliard’s delightfully written guide, which showcases the breadth and diversity of its cultural practices and centers the imaginations of those who produced them. With deep commitment to both place and field, Making Our Future is sure to be a lasting model of public scholarship at its most inventive." —Elizabeth Catte, author of What You Are Getting Wrong about Appalachia

"Innovative and inspiring, Making Our Future is a significant contribution to Appalachian studies. Hilliard combines first-rate research with great storytelling to show us how West Virginia cultural practices we often take for granted are already incubating strategies for more socially just futures." —Ann Pancake, author of Strange As This Weather Has Been

“A fascinating example of folklore fieldwork in West Virginia. People from the state . . . will find places and concepts they recognize thoughtfully and respectfully represented, and outsiders will gain an understanding of the deeply complex and communal past and present of the Mountain State.” Southern Review of Books

"An incontrovertible case for viewing folklore as a dynamic force not just of the past, but of the present & the future."Appalachian Mountain Books

“Making Our Future brings fresh and profound insights to our current understanding of Appalachian culture and music.” Songlines Magazine

"[Hilliard] is . . . in an excellent position to observe her surroundings, able to see things from a curious outsider’s perspective and with a degree of freshness that lends authority to her observations. Not once does she condescend.” —Los Angeles Review of Books

"Making Our Future is an overwhelming success as a book about public folklore and the documentation of expressive culture...Beyond that, the book’s prose strikes the rare balance between academic and poetic. I hope that more projects such as this one emerge not just from Hilliard, but from other public folklorists as well." Journal of Folklore Research

“A crisp and engaging examination of the cultural vibrancy of Appalachia. . . . Hilliard’s greatest strength is not simply exploring the diversity of culture within West Virginia, but pointing the reader toward a shift in thinking about the role of those who practice traditional folkways.”North Carolina Historical Review

"Hilliard skillfully weaves together the past and present, showing that the region's cultural fabric is a continually evolving tapestry of historically informed stories, customs, and artifacts that are being maintained, reinterpreted, or honored in the present in hopes of creating a better future." Winterthur Portfolio