"Magic Dirt": Transcending Great Divides in Scott McClanahan's Crapalachia

Scott McClanahan, rising star of the US Indie Lit world and "Poet Laureate of Real America" (Moran), writes miasmic chronicles of life in a West Virginian holler. In Crapalachia: A Biography of Place (2013), as in many of the tales he releases in Dickensian pace, McClanahan ties the fate o...

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Main Author: Eva-Maria Müller
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Innsbruck 2024-10-01
Series:Journal of the Austrian Association for American Studies
Subjects:
Online Access:https://jaaas.eu/jaaas/article/view/193
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author Eva-Maria Müller
author_facet Eva-Maria Müller
author_sort Eva-Maria Müller
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description Scott McClanahan, rising star of the US Indie Lit world and "Poet Laureate of Real America" (Moran), writes miasmic chronicles of life in a West Virginian holler. In Crapalachia: A Biography of Place (2013), as in many of the tales he releases in Dickensian pace, McClanahan ties the fate of a place to the fate of its people and connects environmental destruction to the ruins of life. Where mountains are stripped away, happiness is not at home. McClanahan tells family stories of deforestation and disability, mining disasters and mental illness, structural poverty and opportunities denied. His stories are about the slow and fast deaths of forgotten people in forgotten places and he tells them with a ballistic sensibility that opens up new spaces to negotiate difference. Crapalachia is a threnody for a wounded region that complicates imagined hierarchies of center and periphery and blends the worlds of fact and fiction as well as tragedy and comedy. The semi-autobiography mines so deeply for privation that, at its close, it lays bare some of the most hopeful principles of American transcendentalism. In between personal hardships, local misery, national movements, and universal human experience, McClanahan has us see "Crapalachia as the center of the world" (35). This paper explores how the aesthetic, narrative, and stylistic strategies of Crapalachia help navigate the local, national, and global routes of fictions of disregard.
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spelling doaj-art-7a7dc2aee7a1453b9ec83215c1c2fa9e2025-01-29T12:52:47ZengUniversity of InnsbruckJournal of the Austrian Association for American Studies2616-95332024-10-016110.47060/jaaas.v6i1.193"Magic Dirt": Transcending Great Divides in Scott McClanahan's CrapalachiaEva-Maria Müller0University of InnsbruckScott McClanahan, rising star of the US Indie Lit world and "Poet Laureate of Real America" (Moran), writes miasmic chronicles of life in a West Virginian holler. In Crapalachia: A Biography of Place (2013), as in many of the tales he releases in Dickensian pace, McClanahan ties the fate of a place to the fate of its people and connects environmental destruction to the ruins of life. Where mountains are stripped away, happiness is not at home. McClanahan tells family stories of deforestation and disability, mining disasters and mental illness, structural poverty and opportunities denied. His stories are about the slow and fast deaths of forgotten people in forgotten places and he tells them with a ballistic sensibility that opens up new spaces to negotiate difference. Crapalachia is a threnody for a wounded region that complicates imagined hierarchies of center and periphery and blends the worlds of fact and fiction as well as tragedy and comedy. The semi-autobiography mines so deeply for privation that, at its close, it lays bare some of the most hopeful principles of American transcendentalism. In between personal hardships, local misery, national movements, and universal human experience, McClanahan has us see "Crapalachia as the center of the world" (35). This paper explores how the aesthetic, narrative, and stylistic strategies of Crapalachia help navigate the local, national, and global routes of fictions of disregard. https://jaaas.eu/jaaas/article/view/193American RomanticismAppalachian StudiesMountain Literature
spellingShingle Eva-Maria Müller
"Magic Dirt": Transcending Great Divides in Scott McClanahan's Crapalachia
Journal of the Austrian Association for American Studies
American Romanticism
Appalachian Studies
Mountain Literature
title "Magic Dirt": Transcending Great Divides in Scott McClanahan's Crapalachia
title_full "Magic Dirt": Transcending Great Divides in Scott McClanahan's Crapalachia
title_fullStr "Magic Dirt": Transcending Great Divides in Scott McClanahan's Crapalachia
title_full_unstemmed "Magic Dirt": Transcending Great Divides in Scott McClanahan's Crapalachia
title_short "Magic Dirt": Transcending Great Divides in Scott McClanahan's Crapalachia
title_sort magic dirt transcending great divides in scott mcclanahan s crapalachia
topic American Romanticism
Appalachian Studies
Mountain Literature
url https://jaaas.eu/jaaas/article/view/193
work_keys_str_mv AT evamariamuller magicdirttranscendinggreatdividesinscottmcclanahanscrapalachia