The Philadelphia Mummers: Building Community Through Play

Front Cover
Temple University Press, Aug 13, 2009 - History - 256 pages

Every New Year's Day since 1901, the Philadelphia Mummers have presented a spectacular show of shows that raucously snakes and shimmies its way through city streets. The Mummers Parade features music, dance, comedy, and mime, along with dazzling costumes and floats. Although the lavish event is now televised to a wide audience, it is still rooted in the same neighborhoods where it began.

This book explores the community created and annually reaffirmed by the Philadelphia Mummers. The author spent more than five years with the Mummers, observing their lives and rituals as she took part in their preparations and parades. Writing with the fascination of a sociologist and the excitement of a participant, Masters examines the Mummers from their beginnings. Through the prism of their century-long history, we can see how communities retain their identities and how they are affected by larger cultural trends.

 

Contents

INTRODUCTION
1
The Early Years of the Mummers Parade
16
The Contemporary Parade
42
The Mummers and Diversity
69
Photo gallery follows page 94
95
The Experience of the Parade
95
5 Rituals and the Play Community
114
6 Family Club and Neighborhood
131
7 The Experience of Play
167
8 The Mummers Past and Future
191
The Ethnographic Challenge
195
NOTES
201
REFERENCES
213
INDEX
225
Copyright

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Page 10 - Community is founded on man conceived in his wholeness rather than in one or another of the roles, taken separately, that he may hold in a social order.

About the author (2009)

Patricia Anne Masters is Term Assistant Professor of Sociology and Director of the Undergraduate Program in the Department of Sociology and Anthropology, George Mason University.