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theHandpuppet

(19,964 posts)
Wed Sep 17, 2014, 05:53 PM Sep 2014

The Hillbilly Stereotype: Razing History, Leveling Appalachia

Many thanks to Antigone382 for posting this link on the General Discussion forum.

http://kasamaproject.org/race-liberation/3395-27the-hillbilly-stereotype-razing-history-leveling-appalachia
The Hillbilly Stereotype: Razing History, Leveling Appalachia
Appalachian activism, culture and values have had tremendous impacts on life in the United States. Union coal miners put their lives on the line, and sometimes lost them, for worker’s rights, and we have reaped the rewards of their legacy. The miners who fought in the Battle of Blair Mountain, the largest labor insurrection in United States history, laid the foundation for a national movement that eventually won the eight-hour day, weekends and minimum wage. Appalachians were pioneers of popular education, founding the Highlander Folk School and settlement schools, and were critical leaders and allies in the Civil Rights Movement.


No, I Don’t Find Your Hillbilly Jokes Funny: Cultural Stereotyping & the Destruction of Appalachia

I was presenting on a panel about resistance to strip mining in Appalachia at the 2010 Baltimore Radical Book Fair, and we’d made it to the question-and-answer session. Hands in the audience bolted up to ask about community-outsider activist relations, Obama’s policies on mountaintop removal and the efficacy of civil resistance in ending this destructive form of coal mining. Each question posed its own challenge, but none were particularly unexpected. That is, until one of the presenters called on an unassuming woman in the front row.

“I regularly read the comments section on the Beckley Register-Herald site,” she told us, “From these comments, I’ve learned that these people, they like what they’re doing, they like blowing up mountains.”

I first speculated that she was towing the coal industry line, suggesting that strip-mining brings jobs to coal-producing areas and is universally welcome in those regions. If someone received all their news about mining from the rabidly pro-coal Beckley, West Virginia Register-Herald, it’s reasonable that they’d come away with those sentiments.*

“They [Appalachians living in coal-extraction areas] hate us, they hate Obama, they hate people from Baltimore, they hate black people, they hate Muslims,” she continued, troubling my earlier assumption. Her mouth was literally twisting in anger as she spoke, “You say there are people [in Appalachia] who care about what’s happening but I see no evidence of that. Why are you there helping them? We should just say fuck ‘em, they want what’s happening to them.”.... MORE at the link posted above.

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The Hillbilly Stereotype: Razing History, Leveling Appalachia (Original Post) theHandpuppet Sep 2014 OP
Thanks for posting this. William769 Sep 2014 #1
You're very welcome theHandpuppet Sep 2014 #2
Especially with a lot of "liberals". William769 Sep 2014 #3
Yes, it's pretty obvious theHandpuppet Sep 2014 #4
my impression of appalachia is that it's filled with some very nice people redruddyred Sep 2014 #5
It's also filled with people who are fighting like hell for change theHandpuppet Sep 2014 #7
that might be the tea party's fault. redruddyred Sep 2014 #9
Good article A Little Weird Sep 2014 #6
I agree that is a great article. greatlaurel Sep 2014 #8

theHandpuppet

(19,964 posts)
2. You're very welcome
Wed Sep 17, 2014, 06:03 PM
Sep 2014

Antigone382 had posted it to a thread in the GD forum and I was happy to cross post it here. Can't believe we're still having to fight these battles.

theHandpuppet

(19,964 posts)
4. Yes, it's pretty obvious
Wed Sep 17, 2014, 08:11 PM
Sep 2014

I've NEVER seen it quite this bad, though:
http://www.democraticunderground.com/?com=view_post&forum=1002&pid=5548327

If anyone still wonders why Appalachia Group was created as a safe space, the thread above should remove all doubt.

 

redruddyred

(1,615 posts)
5. my impression of appalachia is that it's filled with some very nice people
Wed Sep 17, 2014, 08:21 PM
Sep 2014

who just happen to vote the wrong way.

making fun of texas (or rather, its shitty politicians) gets carte blanche tho, and I think it should stay that way.

theHandpuppet

(19,964 posts)
7. It's also filled with people who are fighting like hell for change
Wed Sep 17, 2014, 08:41 PM
Sep 2014

Including a lot of good people on DU. But unless folks are tossing around shitty stereotypes about toothless hicks and even implying the presence of genetic inferiority, no one seems to care what's happening in Appalachia. About the only time you hear anyone on DU talk about Appalachia is when there's an opportunity to trot out the most insulting stereotypes and make totally tasteless jokes unworthy of anyone who would call themselves a progressive.

 

redruddyred

(1,615 posts)
9. that might be the tea party's fault.
Mon Sep 22, 2014, 05:29 AM
Sep 2014

but I agree with you; making fun of poor white people is in bad taste. unfortunately, they're also an easy target.

greatlaurel

(2,010 posts)
8. I agree that is a great article.
Wed Sep 17, 2014, 11:13 PM
Sep 2014

Bookmarked for reference material. The writer has really hit the nail on the head.

Thanks for the OP.

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