PhD, University of Edinburgh (1993); AB, Dartmouth College, Hanover, NH (1983)
Lecturer
- About
-
- Email Address
- t.a.mckean@abdn.ac.uk
- Telephone Number
- +44 (0)1224 273882
- Telephone Number
- +44 (0)1224 272996
- Office Address
The Elphinstone Institute MacRobert Building King's College Aberdeen AB24 5UA
- School/Department
- School of Language, Literature, Music and Visual Culture
Biography
I am a folklorist specializing in Scots and Gaelic song, along with custom and belief, community craft traditions and their relevance in today's world, and fieldwork methodology. Of particular interest is the relationship of traditional practices to the individual, the role of creativity in tradition, and how traditional skills can help build individual and community resilience in challenging times.
As part of the James Madison Carpenter Project team, I have been working with cylinder and disc recordings of North-East singers made between 1929 and 1935, leading towards publication of a critical edition of the collection. The project has been funded by the British Academy and the National Endowment for the Humanities under the auspices of the American Folklore Society, and in association with the Library of Congress, Washington, DC (www.abdn.ac.uk/elphinstone/carpenter).
Ongoing research with boatbuilding traditions looks at the idea of 'knowing by doing': how people young and old learn embodied craft skills by imitation, proximity, and osmosis, and how these skills enhance people's cultural confidence and self esteem.
My postgraduate teaching includes Custom and Belief, Scots and Gaelic Song, along with Fieldwork and Archiving methodology. I have organized a number of conferences, including the 1999 and 2007 Kommission für Volksdichtung ballad conference.
In 1993, I established the North East Folklore Archive at Mintlaw, Aberdeenshire as part of my work as Traditional Music Resident for Banff and Buchan District Council (now Aberdeeenshire), 1993-1996. The archive has continued to develop under the direction of Gavin Sutherland and much of my fieldwork material is now available on the web at the Banff and Buchan Collection.
- Research
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Current Research
Current research includes:
- Scotland's fire festivals, particularly the burning of the Clavie in Burghead, Moray;
- Creativity within traditional forms
- Craft traditions and knowing by doing
- New England vernacular architecture;
- The effects of field collection in the North-East;
- Macaronic song traditions;
- The relationship of memory and song in west coast Gaelic communities.
- Publications
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Folklore is Not about Communication
Contributions to Conferences: Oral PresentationsSinging Families of Aberdeenshire
Contributions to Conferences: Oral PresentationsDigitizing and Editing the James Madison Carpenter Collection
Contributions to Conferences: Oral PresentationsTradition and Modernity: Gaelic Bards in the Twentieth Century
Chapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Entries for Encyclopedias and DictionariesWillie Mathieson and the Primary Audience for Traditional Song
Contributions to Conferences: Oral PresentationsTriangulating Significance and Beauty in the James Madison Carpenter Collection
Contributions to Conferences: PapersScotland
Encyclopedia of World Folklore. Clements, W. (ed.). Greenwood PressChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters'Specimens of Sly and Beautiful Allegory’, Review of Jacobite Relics
Studies in Hogg and His WorldContributions to Journals: Reviews of Books, Films and ArticlesScholarly notes to CD: Elizabeth Stewart, Binnorrie: Songs, Ballads, and Tunes
University of Aberdeen: Elphinstone Institute (Print). 32 pages.Other Contributions: Other ContributionsThe Stewarts of Fetterangus and Literate Oral Tradition
The Singer and the Scribe: European Ballad Traditions and European Ballad Cultures, pp. 181-207, 26 pagesChapters in Books, Reports and Conference Proceedings: Chapters