Jane C. Beck Explained

Jane C. Beck (born 1941) is an American folklorist and oral historian. She is Executive Director Emeritus and founder of the Vermont Folklife Center and has published research on the folklore of Vermont and on African American belief systems.

Early life and education

Jane (née Choate) Beck grew up in Long Island, New York. Her father, Thomas Hyde Choate, worked as an investment banker. Her mother, Jane Harte Choate was involved with a number of charitable organizations.[1]

Beck attended St. Timothy's School in Maryland and then Middlebury College, Vermont. At Middlebury College, she read American Literature and met her future husband, Professor Horace Beck. She graduated from Middlebury College in 1963 and undertook graduate studies in folklore at the University of Pennsylvania. She married Horace in 1965. She completed her Ph.D. in 1969 with a thesis entitled 'Ghostlore of the British Isles and Ireland'.[2]

Career

Beck began work as state folklorist for Vermont in 1978. The role was created through the Vermont Council on the Arts.[3]

Beck founded the Vermont Folklife Center as a private non-profit organization in 1983. She served as its executive director until 2007.[4]

After retirement, Beck published Daisy Turner's Kin: An African American Family Saga (2015).[5] Daisy Turner was the daughter of freed African American slaves and the book relates four generations of oral history from her family. It was based on interviews Beck carried out with Turner, beginning in 1983 when Turner was 100 years old. Beck traveled to Virginia, West Africa, and England to research the family history of Turner for the book.

Recognition

Beck served as president of the American Folklore Society (AFS) between 1995 and 1996.[6] Her Presidential address was titled 'Talking Stock' and reflected on her 35 years as a member of the AFS. It drew on interviews with 100 fellow members of the Society.

She received the Lifetime Achievement Award from the Center for Vermont Research at the University of Vermont in 2011.

In 2016, Daisy Turner's Kin: An African American Family Saga was awarded both the Wayland D. Hand Prize (by the History and Folklore Section) and the Chicago Folklore Prize (as "best book of folklore scholarship for the year") by the American Folklore Society.[7]

Selected publications

External links

Notes and References

  1. Web site: Walsh . Molly . Folklorist Jane Beck Wrote the Book on Freed Slaves in Vermont . 2022-04-05 . Seven Days . en.
  2. Ghostlore of the British isles and Ireland . University Microfilms International . 1980 . Ann Arbor, Mich. . English . Jane C . Beck. 66018400.
  3. Beck . Jane C. . 1997 . Taking Stock: 1996 American Folklore Society Presidential Address . The Journal of American Folklore . 110 . 436 . 123–139 . 10.2307/541809 . 541809 . 0021-8715.
  4. Web site: 2016-06-24 . Jane Beck . 2022-04-05 . Vermont Humanities . en-US.
  5. Web site: University of Illinois Press . UI Press Jane C. Beck Daisy Turner's Kin . 2022-04-05 . www.press.uillinois.edu . en.
  6. Web site: Past AFS Presidents . 2022-04-05 . The American Folklore Society . en-US.
  7. Web site: 2016-10-28 . Awards: Daisy Turner's Kin . 2022-04-05 . Illinois Press Blog . en-US.