Mackinac Island resort occupational folklore collection

 Collection
Identifier: GLMS-0098

Collection Overview

Abstract

Six audio tapes of interviews of seasonal workers at Mackinac Island (1990) and the resulting research paper prepared for an independent study course in the Department of Popular Culture, Bowling Green State University.

Dates

  • Creation: 1990
  • Digitized: 2018-2019

Extent

.5 Cubic Feet (1 legal manuscript box)

Creator

Scope and Contents

The collection is the product of Peter Coogan's research conducted on Mackinac Island, Michigan in the summer of 1990. Coogan interviewed seasonal employees of the hotels and restaurants for an independent study course administered by Bowling Green State University. Coogan sought information on working conditions and social activities in which these seasonal workers were involved.

Coogan drew from sociological theory on rites of passage within societies in order to characterize the nature of the work and social conditions faced by the college students employed for the tourist season on Mackinac Island. An ambiguous transitional stage of life was said to apply to the seasonal workers who were in a liminal state between childhood and full adulthood.

Interpersonal behavior toward other workers and employers was studied to assess the liminal state in which the workers lived while on Mackinac Island. An ambiguous mix of freedom and control with responsibility and irresponsibility marked the behavior of the seasonal workers. These employees had job-related responsibilities but little of the freedom workers have in more permanent employment settings.

Social relationships formed by the workers were frequently seen as unsatisfying because many of the employees seemed to want no responsibility to accompany their actions in the area of dating. Transition to full adulthood had yet to occur.

Coogan wrote his conclusions in a forty-one page research paper prepared from six audio tapes of interviews conducted with thirty-seven seasonal workers. Both the research paper and the taped interviews are available to researchers interested in seasonal labor conditions in the tourist industry or in liminal behavior in American young adults in the 18 to 22-year age range. Researchers interested in differences between male and female perceptions regarding dating may also find the interviews useful.

It should be noted that Coogan's sample of thirty-seven interviewees is roughly one percent of the total number of seasonal workers he determined were on Mackinac Island in 1990.

Biographical Sketch

Peter M. Coogan was enrolled at Bowling Green State University and completed this research as an independent study course in the Department of Popular Culture. Coogan was a resident of Kent, Ohio at the time he donated this collection to the Historical Collections of the Great Lakes.

Conditions Governing Access

No known access restrictions.

Conditions Governing Use

Researchers using this collection assume full responsibility for conforming to the laws of libel, privacy, and copyright, and are responsible for securing permissions necessary for publication or reproduction.

Language of Materials

English

Immediate Source of Acquisition

This collection was donated to the Historical Collections of the Great Lakes by Peter M. Coogan on December 4, 1990. Instruments of gift were signed by the interviewees related to this collection on various dates in July 1990.

Title
Guide to the Mackinac Island Resort Occupational Folklore Collection
Author
Mark Sprang
Date
December 2018
Description rules
Describing Archives: A Content Standard
Language of description
English
Script of description
Latin
Language of description note
English