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Behind the Story
by Mat Schwarzman
Tom Hansell, the protagonist for our story entitled "Coal
Bucket Outlaw" (pp. 43-57) was one of the first artists
chosen to be in the guidebook, and like most, was chosen by
a national advisors group made up of writers, academics and
practitioners in the field.
Tom Hansell |
Our intention was to identify as broad a range of artists to
focus upon as possible, in order to communicate the breadth
of our field in terms of artistic disciplines, social
issues, types of communities, parts of the country, ethnic
backgrounds, etc. Each advisor nominated their "Top Ten"
and submitted an email form. (view Sample Nomination Form PDF)
In Tom's case, it was his group that was chosen. Appalshop
www.appalshop.org is a 30+ year old multi-disciplinary arts
and education center in the heart of Appalachia producing
original films, video, theater, music and spoken-word
recordings, radio, photography, multimedia, and books.
Because my New Orleans research team (made up of
photographer Mimi Zarsky, research assistant Kimberly
Dummons, dog Lundi and myself) was within two days' drive of
Whitesburg, KY, we decided to go by car this time (instead
of the usual first class flying, of course). We spent about
two days in Whitesburg, meeting with Tom, his colleagues at
Appalshop, and folks in the community.
When I returned home, I listened to over 3 hours of audio
interviews that I had conducted with Tom and others.
I took pages of
notes trying to represent and wrangle Tom's complex
experiences as a documentarian into a coherent, linear
narrative.
I became fascinated with Tom's lifelong obsession with the
complex system through which we receive electricity. Tom's
feeling for the important, but compromised role played in
the system by coal-hauling truckers"coal bucket
outlaws"permeates his life.
That's one of the main points that our cartoonist, the
amazing Ellen Forney (www.ellenforney.com), tried to
communicate in her representation of Tom's story. Here is a
"before" and "after" of one of her earlier sketches, as we
grappled with making potentially very dry material
interesting and easy to understand.
Another way we dealt with this issue was to do something
unique in the book: following the Tom Hansell story, we
added a two-page 'visual music video' based on the song
"Coal Bucket Outlaw" that inspired Tom's title. Using the
song as her guide, Ellen found some great ways to focus the
reader's attention on the very human side of our
coal-hauling, electricity-producing world.
Click here to watch the "Coal Bucket Outlaw" visual music video

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