Ain't You Got a Right: Jamie Hunter, Loretta Hunter (Side 2 of 2), Undated
Scope and Contents
The Guy and Candie Carawan Sea Island recordings collection, 1960-1969, contains field recordings and oral history interviews documenting Gullah Geechee life and culture in rural Johns Island. The field recordings include worship services and watch nights at the Moving Star Praise House, spirituals and songs, stories, and children's games and rhymes. The interviews focus on the storytellers' upbringings, family, life, culture, and conditions on the Island, and the ways the Island is changing. The recordings were primarily created, first, during the Carawan's time assisting the Island's Citizenship School and, later, when they lived on the Island from 1963 to 1965. The materials gathered during their time on Johns Island were used to write Ain't you got a right to the tree of life? The People of Johns Island, South Carolina—Their Faces, Their Words, and Their Songs.
The recordings are held on reel-to-reel tapes and audiocassettes and many of the oral histories have been transcribed. The collection is arranged by the type of material.
Series I: Reel-to-Reel Tapes, 1960-1969
Series II: Transcripts, 1960-1969
Series III: Audiocassettes, 1960-1969
The materials in this collection are access copies of the originals preserved in the Guy and Candie Carawan Collection, 1955-2010, housed within the Southern Folklife collection at the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill. The copies within this collection were provided to the Avery Research Center so that access copies could be more easily available to the people of Johns Island.
Dates
- Creation: Undated
Creator
- From the Collection: Carawan, Guy (Person)
- From the Collection: Carawan, Candie (Person)
Access Restrictions
There are no restrictions on this collection. However, the Avery Research Center does not have the technology required for researchers to listen to the reel-to-reels. A cassette player will be made available to researchers in the Avery Research Center's Reading Room to listen to the audiocassettes.
An inventory of the reel-to-reel tapes with track listings for the field recordings and brief abstracts for the oral histories is available in the Reading Room as part of Avery Research Center's Ready Reference.
Full Extent
From the Collection: 4.83 linear feet (4 Paige cartons, 2 Hollinger boxes, 120 reel-to-reel tapes, and 66 audiocassettes)
Language of Materials
From the Collection: English
Repository Details
Part of the Avery Research Center for African American History and Culture Repository
125 Bull Street
Charleston South Carolina 29424 United States
843-953-7608
averyresearchcenter@cofc.edu
