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6th January 09, 06:22 AM
#1
A logical response, Rex, and one that I have heard several times before. And I will not deny that, especially in tough economic times, every event is fighting for the potential attendee's dollar.
Yet, from my culturally-stifled little spot in the world, I need drive no more than 100 miles to attend festivals dedicated to the following traditions: Irish, Greek, Native American (though, I'll grant you, many tribes are represented), Polish, Serbian, German and Italian.
As one who likes to experience different cultures, I have been to these festivals in recent years. They seem to find a couple of days' worth of entertainment, food and attractions unique to their heritage. So, I don't know about that reasoning.
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6th January 09, 07:01 AM
#2
 Originally Posted by 6April1320
Yet, from my culturally-stifled little spot in the world, I need drive no more than 100 miles to attend festivals dedicated to the following traditions: Irish, Greek, Native American (though, I'll grant you, many tribes are represented), Polish, Serbian, German and Italian.
Perhaps these festivals don't have any trouble getting sufficient attendance.
Or perhaps the Scottish groups have become so entrenched in the general population that people don't tend to differentiate them anymore. The Scottish have been coming over since the earliest days of the English colonies. Big influxes of the other groups came later, so perhaps they're still recent enough for people to maintain the difference in their minds. It seems to me that the Scottish, and the Welsh, tend to get lumped into a general "British" background.
Who knows?
We're fools whether we dance or not, so we might as well dance. - Japanese Proverb
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6th January 09, 07:33 AM
#3
As we are a kilted clan,
I have always found it amusing the number of vendors of items associated with Scotland at the local Irish festival. Haggis and kilts, and the bucket shops of genealogy for the clan septs and "arms". Including one year of Highland Games demonstrations and competition.
The New Hampshire Highland Games did an excellent job of putting together an event that was predominately Scottish. Most of the Celtic performers did their Scottish material with very little of the Irish showing. The vendors were all Scottish oriented, and the event was special in that nature. As a member of NHScot, (the sponsor) I can well appreciate the work it takes to schedule all the factions that it takes to get the games to happen.
I have the mix of ancestry by way of Ulster to my Scot roots. Happily Scot-Irish-Dutch-German-French-American MUTT.
Slainte
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6th January 09, 10:12 AM
#4
First of all, I have no beef with festivals that call themselves "Celtic." I know what I'm getting when I attend such events and I enjoy them very much. My initial post is directed at those that bill themselves as Highland games or Scottish festivals. If I pay my money under the impression that it is to be a celebration of things Scottish, is that not what I should get?
Second, I fail to see how anything I have written could be taken to imply that I am in any way concerned with the diluting of the Scottish race, Riverkilt. Please. My Irish girlfriend and two Irish best friends would find that amusing. No, my post wasn't about that. It was an observation that those of us of Scottish heritage, with whatever else it may be mixed, may enjoy the opportunity to celebrate that culture without having to share the proverbial stage for, oh, a couple of days out of every year, exactly in the same manner as the other cultures I have mentioned do, and rightly so.
Third, I have no problem with a Scottish festival hosting an Irish musician or pan-Celtic band. But when the bill is dominated by Irish groups and/or generically Celtic performers, it is a Scottish festival in name only. And that is what I find disappointing.
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