Sarah L. Morris is assistant professor in the department of English and coordinator of undergraduate writing at West Virginia University. She is also co-director of WVU's National Writing Project. This is her first book.
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Description
Acknowledgments Chapter 1The Song Is a Memory (an Introduction) Chapter 2 Hiraeth, Home, and West Virginian Rhetorics of Identity Chapter 3 Placing "Country Roads" in Context Chapter 4 A WestVirginia State of Mind Chapter 5 Evoking (and Marketing) Belonging and Home Chapter 6 The Window, the Mirror, and the Lens:Pedagogical Implications References Index
"This brilliant, heartfelt work belongs on the bookshelf of anyone interested in regional West Virginia and Appalachian studies. Morris's thoughtful exploration of the ways we are shaped by music and public rhetoric has relevance for people in all places and all walks of life. I never knew how much 'Country Roads' could teach me about identity in all its complexities until I read this book." -Amanda E. Hayes, author of The Politics of Appalachian Rhetoric (WVU Press, 2018) and The Madison Women: Gender, Higher Education, and Literacy in Nineteenth-Century Appalachia(WVU Press, 2024)

