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  • Home
  • About Us
    • Welcome!
    • Mission
    • Board and Staff
    • Membership
  • Programs
    • Educator Professional Development
    • Annual Arts Education Conference >
      • Overview
      • Submit a Proposal
      • Registration
    • Joint Arts Administrators Institute
    • Graduate Fellowship Program
  • Resources
    • Journeys: Guidebook to Arts Integration for Secondary Educators >
      • Arts Integration Resources
    • Arts Ed Thread
    • Arts Chat: Blog >
      • Arts Chat: Weaving the Threads of Arts in Education
    • Gallup Student Poll
  • Recognition and Awards
    • STEAM School of Excellence
    • Ray Doughty Arts Integration Award
    • School of Excellence
    • Arts Administrator of the Year
    • Community Arts Education Impact Award
  • Donate
  • Contact

Arts Chat
Weaving the Threads of Arts In Education

Integrating the Arts Through Autumnal Foodways: Celebrating South Carolina’s Rich Culinary Heritage

11/11/2024

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As the holiday season approaches, food takes center stage in celebrations across the Palmetto State. From traditional autumn crops like pumpkins, apples, and pecans to the hearty flavors of sweet potatoes and okra, each ingredient we enjoy today has roots that
stretch deep into our state’s rich history.
​
Working as the Director of Exhibitions and Programs at the Morris Center for Lowcountry Heritage, I had the privilege of hosting The Food We Celebrate, on loan from the South Carolina State Museum. This exhibit provided a remarkable look at South Carolina’s iconic foods and reshaped my understanding of their cultural significance, especially during the holiday season.

South Carolina’s foodways are a blend of traditions from Native Americans, enslaved
Africans, and European settlers, each contributing to the dishes and ingredients we hold
dear. Sweet potatoes, for instance, which feature prominently in holiday pies and
casseroles, were cultivated by Native Americans long before becoming a staple in
Southern cooking. Similarly, okra, an ingredient in hearty stews, was brought to the
region by enslaved Africans who carried their culinary traditions across the Atlantic,
helping shape the foundation of Southern cuisine.

Exploring resources like Taste the State: South Carolina's Signature Foods, Recipes,
and Their Stories
by David S. Shields and Kevin Mitchell has deepened my appreciation
for these foods’ origins. This book highlights how many of the ingredients we enjoy
today and tells a story of resilience and adaptation.
​
Whether baking a pecan pie, stirring an okra stew, or roasting sweet potatoes, each
dish is a celebration of our state’s agricultural heritage and the diverse communities that
helped shape South Carolina’s culinary identity. While you are celebrating this season,
let’s honor that legacy by recognizing the cultural significance behind every bite.

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    Author

    Michelle Robinson is the program manager for Arts in Healing the Medical University of South Carolina. Follow the program on socials @muscarts!

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    Cyndi Waddell is a native South Carolinian and graduated from Columbia College in 1986 with a Bachelor of Arts degree and a major in Dance.  She also holds a Master of Education degree from Converse College. After graduation she danced professionally in Cleveland, Ohio and New York throughout the late 1980’s.  After returning to South Carolina in 1990, she began teaching dance education in the public schools and currently is the dance specialist at Stone Academy of Communication Arts in Greenville County.  In the course of her career she has supported arts education through service on the writing committee for the South Carolina Dance Standards, as the President of the South Carolina Dance Association, as South Carolina Dance Educator of the Year, as a grant reader for the South Carolina Arts CommissionSouth Carolina Department of Education and as a participant and facilitator for the Curriculum Leadership Institute in the Arts and the South Carolina Arts Leadership for Success Academy, and as a member on the National Dance Education Organization’s Mentorship Committee.

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    Sarah Blackman is a poet, fiction and creative non-fiction author originally from the Washington D.C. area. She graduated from Washington College, summa cum laude, with a BA in English, minor Creative Writing, and earned her MFA from the University of Alabama in 2007 with a primary concentration in fiction and a secondary concentration in poetry.  Her poetry and prose has been published in a number of journals and magazines, including The Georgia Review, Denver Quarterly, Crazyhorse, and American Poetry Review among others. Blackman is the co-fiction editor of DIAGRAM, the fiction editor of Cherry Tree and the founding editor of Crashtest, an online magazine for high school age writers which she edits alongside the students at the Fine Arts Center. Additionally, she is a fiction reviewer for Kirkus. Her story collection Mother Box was the winner of the 2012 Ronald Sukenick/American Book Review Innovative Fiction Prize and was published by FC2 in 2013. Her novel, Hex, was published by the same press in April, 2016. In 2018 she joined the board of FC2 and in 2020 she was awarded a South Carolina Humanities Individual Artist Fellowship. She is represented by the Wylie Agency.

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    Roger E. Simpson, Jr. is the Education Associate for the Visual & Performing Arts for the SC Department of Education. Prior to this position, Roger worked as a music educator in SC schools. 

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    Jeff Robinson is the Executive Director of SC Arts Alliance, which is SC's champion for arts support. Jeff is also the Chair of PSAE's Board!

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    This blog was compiled by Melody Powell with contributions from Chris Crabb and Katie Kerechanin.

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    Jenny Kabool has been the Executive Director of Palmetto State Arts Education since 2022. A life-long lover of all things theater, she has performed on stage in musicals, as a part of an improv team, and as a storyteller. She is mom to two awesome dino-loving boys.

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    Kayleigh Vaughn is the Director of Exhibitions and Programs at the Morris Center for Lowcountry Heritage and serves as the treasurer for the Palmetto State Arts Education board. With a passion for South Carolina’s cultural history, she curates exhibits that celebrate the state’s diverse heritage and artistic traditions. 

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    Author

    Christopher Crabb is a Project Manager with ArtsNOW and serves on the board for PSAE (Palmetto State Arts Education). Over his 20-year career in public education, Chris has served as a dance educator, arts-integration instructional coach, arts grant manager, and district coordinator of performing and fine arts. He was the 2022 Arts Administrator of the Year (SC Art Education Association) and a Top 5 Finalist for Beaufort County District Teacher of the Year. 

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    Author

    ​Kerrie Kish is the principal at Fairforest Elementary, PSAE’s 2023 STEAM School of Excellence. Before transitioning into administration 9 years ago, she taught visual arts for 11 years at the elementary and middle school levels. Mrs. Kish serves on PSAE’s Board of Directors and avidly supports learners and leaders through STEAM integration.

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    ​Melody Powell is a 3rd grade teacher at Stone Academy, an arts integrated elementary school in Greenville County. Outside of the classroom, Melody serves on the board for PSAE (Palmetto State Arts Education), works with the ABC Institute as a part of the Teacher as Curator cohort, and is an active teaching partner with the SMARTarts program (a subsidiary of the Metropolitan Arts Council).

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