Laken Brooks and Collaborators
For generations, Appalachians have used (and continue to use) a variety of oral traditions, songwriting, and other forms of folk art to communicate. However, environmental and infrastructural factors have presented some obstacles regarding print literacy in rural mountain communities.
During the 2024 GCO conference, Laken Brooks presented a talk about how the Packhorse Librarians embraced adaptation to promote print literacy in Kentucky. The Packhorse Librarians were a group of women who delivered books, often on horseback, to rural communities that may not have access to libraries. When these librarians ran out of new books to distribute, local Appalachians scrapbooked and collaged new stories out of worn magazines and holiday cards. Almost a decade after the Packhorse Librarians hung up their saddles and stopped delivering books, Appalachians continue to use adaptation and co-authorship as literary tools. Storytelling is a communal endeavor.
At the end of this conference talk, participants were invited to create their own communal composition. Participants worked together to create blackout poems, draw illustrations, and organize the collaged pages together into a narrative.