This lively and colorfully illustrated book documents Wisconsin folk traditions in the 1990s: building Harley motorcycles and Ojibwe birch bark canoes; gatherings at neighborhood taverns, polka dances, the Mexican neighborhood store, or the sturgeon-spearing shanties on Lake Winnebago; working on a dairy farm or at a lakeside fish market; brokering a Hmong marriage or restoring the Dickeyville Grotto; and "cheeseheads" tailgating at Lambeau field before a Green Bay Packers football game. Written for a general readership by folklorists, cultural anthropologists, and historians, this book resulted from the Wisconsin Folklife Festivals staged by the Smithsonian Institution in Washington, D.C., and by the Wisconsin Arts Board in Madison, Wisconsin, in honor of the 1998 Wisconsin Sesquicentennial.
A collection of case histories on organization building in celebration of Wisconsin's sesquicentennial. Among the organizations covered are: The Rhinelander School of the Arts, The Harvest of Hope, Lake-To-Lake Cooperative, The Wisconsin Rural Leadership Program, The National Alliance for the Mentally Ill, The Northwoods Council, the Wisconsin Woodland Owner's Association, The Wisconsin Christmas Tree Growers Association, The Wisconsin Tourism Federation, The Wisconsin Youth Symphony, The Wisconsin Association of Lakes, the Kickapoo Valley State Reserve, The Wisconsin Forage Council, The Learning Institute for Non Profit Organizations, Farm Progress Days, the Harambee Neighborhood Organization, and the National Organization for Women.