Donald Kraybill

Donald B. Kraybill (born 1946) is an author, lecturer, and educator on Anabaptist faiths and living.[1] Kraybill is widely recognized for his studies on Anabaptist groups, and is the foremost living expert on the Old Order Amish.

Kraybill is Distinguished College Professor, and Senior Fellow at the Young Center for Anabaptist and Pietist Studies at Elizabethtown College in Elizabethtown, Pennsylvania. He previously served as chair of the Sociology and Social Work Department at Elizabethtown from 1979 to 1985 and as director of the Young Center from 1989 to 1996. He was provost of Messiah College (PA) from 1996 to 2002, before returning to Elizabethtown College in 2003.[2]

Current and recent projects

In October 2005, Young Center was awarded a $100,000 grant from the National Endowment for the Humanities for a three-year collaborative research project entitled "Amish Diversity and Identity: Transformations in 20th Century America." In addition to Kraybill as senior investigator, the investigative team includes Steven Nolt, Professor of History at Goshen College in Indiana, and Karen Johnson-Weiner, Professor of Anthropology at the State University of New York at Potsdam. A national panel of seven scholars advised the research team throughout the project.[3]

The NEH grant enabled the researchers to investigate the Amish experience at the national level, giving attention to geographic expansion, the growth of diversity, changing conceptions of identity and evolving patterns of interaction with the larger society. The team also explored how the Amish have contributed to shaping the identity of a nation that made exceptions in the areas of education, Social Security, and child labor for a religious minority living on its cultural margins. The project resulted in a website (http://www2.etown.edu/amishstudies/); an international conference, The Amish in America: New Identities and Diversities, held in 2007; and a book, The Amish.

Recent book projects include Amish Grace: How Forgiveness Transcended Tragedy (Jossey-Bass, 2007), a discussion of the Amish response to the school shooting at Nickel Mines, and The Amish Way: Patient Faith in a Perilous World (Jossey-Bass, 2010), an exploration of Amish spiritual life and practices, both with coauthors Steven M. Nolt and David L. Weaver-Zercher. Kraybill also authored Concise Encyclopedia of Amish, Brethren, Hutterites, and Mennonites (Johns Hopkins University Press, 2010), which provides basic information about these four Anabaptist groups in North America, and coauthored (with Karen M. Johhson-Weiner and Steven M. Nolt) The Amish, a comprehensive description and analysis of Amish life and culture.

Kraybill's most recent work has been related to five beard-cutting attacks on Amish people in eastern Ohio in the fall of 2011, which led to the arrests of sixteen members of a maverick Amish community in Bergholz, Ohio. Kraybill assisted federal prosecutors in understanding Amish beliefs and practices and served as an expert witness at the federal trial in 2012. He wrote a book about the attacks, investigation, trial, and aftermath: Renegade Amish: Beard Cutting, Hate Crimes, and the Trial of the Bergholz Barbers. In August 2014, the Sixth Circuit Court of Appeals overturned the hate crimes convictions, a ruling that generated much response.[4][5][6]

Kraybill has also been selected to research and write a centennial history of Eastern Mennonite University, his alma mater, to be published in 2017.[7]

Educator and author

Kraybill is the author or editor of more than 18 books and dozens of professional articles and popular[8] articles. His books have been translated into six different languages and his research on Anabaptist groups has been featured in magazines and newspapers, and on radio and television programs across the United States and in many foreign countries.

Kraybill writes almost exclusively on the Anabaptists faiths. In addition to academic books — largely published by Johns Hopkins University Press — he also writes popular books sold in gift shops to tourists, interested in learning more about the plain sects. He is one of two experts — the other being D. Holmes Morton — frequently quoted by reporters to give background to news stories involving the Amish.[9] He also served as a consultant for the PBS show The American Experience series The Amish.[10]

"Because they don't have television or Internet in their homes or Volvos or even pickup trucks in their driveways, the Amish are easily mistaken for Luddites. But they are not anti-technology. Peer into Amish society and you'll see state-of-the-art LED lights, rollerblades, gas grills, solar panels, and battery-powered hand tools. The Amish use technology selectively. They spurn technologies that they fear will ruin their community and its religious values: television, cars, computers, etc. However, they readily accept and invent new technologies (such as a wheel-driven alternator to recharge the batteries on their buggies) that they think will enhance the well-being of their society. Moreover, many Amish "engineers" adapt mainstream technology to fit within their moral values. They strip electric motors from large sanders and replace them with pneumatic motors to provide "Amish electricity" in furniture shops, for example. One thing is certain: Amish people spend much more time than the rest of us assessing the long-term impact of new technologies on human relationships." - From Fake Amish and the Real Ones [11]

There is a problem with a supposed "neutral" academic publishing an article with a title that portends to judge which Amish are appropriately authentic. There are legitimate arguments to be made regarding compliance to originality, but the effect of this article is to marginalize the plain community participants on the show. While those participants aren't compliantly orthodox, a neutral academic can not actively dismiss their voice, no matter how flawed and compromised that voice is, and not be engaging in hegemony.

Degrees

Works

References

  1. Rutter, Jon (4 September 2011). "Hot topic: How Plain treat their horses". Lancaster Online. Retrieved 27 September 2011.
  2. "Donald B. Kraybill". Elizabethtown College. Retrieved 4 October 2011.
  3. "National Endowment for the Humanities 2005 Annual Report" (PDF). National Endowment for the Humanities. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  4. "Is Beard Cutting a Hate Crime". The Huffington Post. 27 August 2014. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  5. "They Cut Off His Beard and Left Him Bleeding". Salon. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  6. "Violence Among the Amish". The Atlantic. Retrieved 1 October 2014.
  7. "Donald B. Kraybill to Pen EMU History". Eastern Mennonite University. Retrieved 14 March 2012.
  8. Kraybill, Donald. "Donald Kraybill". Huffington Post.
  9. "Kraybill Adept With News Media". Crossroads Magazine, Eastern Mennonite University. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  10. "Q&A with Amish Scholar Donald B. Kraybill". Retrieved 11 August 2014.
  11. "Fake Amish and the Real Ones". The Huffington Post. 18 July 2013. Retrieved 11 August 2014.
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