• Work
  • About
  • News
Menu

Emily Hilliard

Folklorist | Writer | Media Producer
  • Work
  • About
  • News

Writing Clips

HazelDickens.jpg

”Making a living by the sweat of her brow”: Hazel dickens and a life of work

March 1, 2021

Informed by archival interviews, writings, correspondence, and performances by Hazel Dickens, and inspired by Jessica Wilkerson’s 2019 NPR article “A Lifetime Of Labor: Maybelle Carter At Work,” West Virginia state folklorist Emily Hilliard considers musician Hazel Dickens’s experiences as a woman engaged in a lifetime of both wage work and care work. This lived experience, as well as Hazel’s approach to music as work, was the foundation which directly informed her identity formation, inspired her songwriting, and fueled her advocacy for working people across the globe.

Read on via Smithsonian Folklife

In Music, West Virginia, Feminism, Labor Tags folklore, folk music, Hazel Dickens, women songwriters, West Virginia, Smithsonian, Smithsonian Folklife, labor, Appalachia
Photo by Emily Hilliard

Photo by Emily Hilliard

Conditions for All of Us: Emily Hilliard in Conversation with Emily Comer

October 1, 2019

“On February 22, 2018, West Virginia public school teachers and school service employees, most of them women, walked out of their classrooms in what would become a nine-day statewide strike, fighting for a 5% raise and affordable healthcare coverage. But what the teachers’ statements, speeches, and protest signs indicated was that this was not just a protest for personal compensation, but a struggle for better social conditions for the future of their communities.“

Read on via Southern Cultures

In Academic, Folklore, History, Interview, Photography, West Virginia Tags labor, Appalachia, West Virginia, West Virginia Teacher Strike, Southern Cultures

Powered by Squarespace