Johnny Cash Festival seeks presenters for 2019 celebration
Arkansas State University Heritage Sites and The Historic Dyess Colony: Johnny Cash Boyhood Home are seeking presentations as part of the 2019 Johnny Cash Heritage Festival scheduled for Thursday through Saturday, Oct. 17-19, in Dyess.
The festival invites proposals for presentations that focus on the ways that country music reflects the American experience — especially the experience of rural Americans in places such as Dyess — and the ways that the American experience is enriched by country music.
Possible topics include:
• Country music as a reflection of American culture.
• Generational legacies, especially the legacy of Johnny Cash and his family.
• Family and community in country music. Presentations about the influence of the Dyess community are especially invited.
• The interconnection between country music and other genres (rockabilly, folk, rock ‘n’ roll, gospel, blues, etc.)
• How Johnny Cash was shaped by, and helped shape, a range of country music genres.
Rosanne Cash, Johnny Cash’s daughter, has written about a list of songs her father made for her in the summer of 1973.
Cash gave them to his daughter “to educate me, to tell me about my Southern roots and my American history, about my legacy. He called the List ‘100 essential country songs’ but he could have called it ‘100 essential American songs,’ because he included history songs, protest songs, early folk songs, Delta Blues, gospel, Texas swing and standards that simply defy genre,” she wrote.
Because it contains numerous styles and themes, country music is difficult to define. But, it is this complexity that has made country music worthy of academic study – the complexity of the music echoes the complexity of the American experience. Just as The List represents Rosanne Cash’s specific “musical genealogy,” country music represents America’s collective “musical genealogy.”
Those songs were the inspiration for Rosanne Cash’s 2009 album “The List.” Along with being the 10th anniversary of “The List,” this year marks the debut of another project that seeks to distill the essence of country music.
Award-winning documentary producer Ken Burns’ eight-part series Country Music premieres Sept. 15 on the Public Broadcasting Service (PBS). Burns describes the project as an effort “to tear away the undergrowth and look at this magnificent stuff as a new way of focusing on America, seeing race, seeing people who think their stories aren’t being told.”
Proposals for presentations that break away from the standard format of reading research papers, appealing to specialists and non-specialists alike, are especially welcome. Research and artistic presentations that incorporate music, images, film, computer graphics, and other interactive elements will be given first preference.
The deadline for application is May 31, 2019. Presenters need to submit an abstract of no more than 150 words, as well as a brief bio and two-page CV, to [email protected], and also make note of any technology needs.