Removing Mountains
Extracting Nature and Identity in the Appalachian Coalfields
Rebecca R. Scott(Author)
University of Minnesota Press
Will be published approx. on 4. August 2010
Book
Hardback
296 pages
978-0-8166-6599-0 (ISBN)
Description
A coal mining technique practiced in southern West Virginia known as mountaintop removal is drastically altering the terrain of the Appalachian Mountains. Peaks are flattened and valleys are filled as the coal industry levels thousands of acres of forest to access the coal, in the process turning the forest into scrubby shrublands and poisoning the water. This is dangerous and environmentally devastating work, but as Rebecca R. Scott shows in Removing Mountains, the issues at play are vastly complicated.
In this rich ethnography of life in Appalachia, Scott examines mountaintop removal in light of controversy and protests from environmental groups calling for its abolishment. But Removing Mountains takes the conversation in a new direction, telling the stories of the businesspeople, miners, and families who believe they depend on the industry to survive. Scott reveals these southern Appalachian coalfields as a meaningful landscape where everyday practices and representations help shape a community's relationship to the environment.
Removing Mountains demonstrates that the paradox that faces this community-forced to destroy their land to make a wage-raises important questions related not only to the environment but also to American national identity, place, and white working-class masculinity.
In this rich ethnography of life in Appalachia, Scott examines mountaintop removal in light of controversy and protests from environmental groups calling for its abolishment. But Removing Mountains takes the conversation in a new direction, telling the stories of the businesspeople, miners, and families who believe they depend on the industry to survive. Scott reveals these southern Appalachian coalfields as a meaningful landscape where everyday practices and representations help shape a community's relationship to the environment.
Removing Mountains demonstrates that the paradox that faces this community-forced to destroy their land to make a wage-raises important questions related not only to the environment but also to American national identity, place, and white working-class masculinity.
Reviews / Votes
"Rebecca R. Scott takes us into the coalfields, mining the cultural poetics that give rise to conflicts over the meaning and significance of this disturbing technology. Her careful excavations reveal the roles that gender, race, and class play in shaping people's sense of belonging both in their local environments and in the larger modern world. These are deep-and sometimes deeply contradictory-cultural processes that are all but invisible to those content to stay on the surface. Scott strips away the easy answers and finds hard questions underneath." -Matt Wray, Temple UniversityMore details
Series
Language
English
Place of publication
Minnesota
United States
Target group
Professional and scholarly
Dimensions
Height: 216 mm
Width: 140 mm
Thickness: 23 mm
ISBN-13
978-0-8166-6599-0 (9780816665990)
Copyright in bibliographic data is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or its licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Classification
Person
Rebecca R. Scott is assistant professor of sociology at the University of Missouri.
Content
Contents
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Logic of Extraction
1. Hillbillies and Coal Miners: Representations of a National Sacrifice Zone
2. Men Moving Mountains: Coal Mining Masculinities and Mountaintop Removal
3. The Gendered Politics of Pro-Mountaintop Removal Discourse
4. ATVs in Action: Transgression, Property Rights, and Tourism on the Hatfield-McCoy Trail
5. Coal Heritage/Coal History: Appalachia, America, and Mountaintop Removal
6. Traces of History: "White" People, Black Coal
Conclusion: Coal Facts
Appendix: Guide to Participants
Notes
Bibliography
Index
Preface
Acknowledgments
Introduction: The Logic of Extraction
1. Hillbillies and Coal Miners: Representations of a National Sacrifice Zone
2. Men Moving Mountains: Coal Mining Masculinities and Mountaintop Removal
3. The Gendered Politics of Pro-Mountaintop Removal Discourse
4. ATVs in Action: Transgression, Property Rights, and Tourism on the Hatfield-McCoy Trail
5. Coal Heritage/Coal History: Appalachia, America, and Mountaintop Removal
6. Traces of History: "White" People, Black Coal
Conclusion: Coal Facts
Appendix: Guide to Participants
Notes
Bibliography
Index