Knitting in 21st Century America: The Culture and Ideology of Knitting Groups in Rural Oregon

Item

Title
Knitting in 21st Century America: The Culture and Ideology of Knitting Groups in Rural Oregon
Author
Robin Roemer
Faculty Sponsor
Isidore Lobnibe
Gavin Keulks
Date
6/1/2017
Abstract
Knitting has existed since the Middle Ages, and continues to thrive well into twenty-first century America. Why do people continue to knit, and why do knitters form themselves into social groups? This senior thesis investigates these and related questions in order to understand the culture of knitting and how knitters keep the practice alive. Drawing on participant observation and oral interviews, it further examines the identities knitters construct as members of knitting communities in rural Oregon, the differences in the craft based on the knitting practices employed, the materials and the patterns used, the gender ideologies of learning how to knit, and the role of online interactions.
Type
Text
Honors Thesis
Department
Honors Program
Language
eng
Rights
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Identifier
honors_theses/136