Cover Image: To Live Here, You Have to Fight

To Live Here, You Have to Fight

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Member Reviews

In the past, I haven't reviewed books that I haven't read. But, I have changed my mind. Firstly, I think that the fact that I couldn't finish a book is a valid criticism and this is where we give feedback to the publisher. Secondly, I need to get my score up. I will not post this anywhere else but here. My rating will be based on what other people would think about this work.

I reached 30% before I dnf'd. I think that this book has an interesting premise. The writing was good. But, it didn't grab my attention. I didn't want to pick up the book. I was distracted by other works.

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Well written a look at a time in history Appalachian history.Full of interesting factsveye opening information I really enjoyed learning about this moment in history. #netgalley#uofillinoispress

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The below 3.5-star review was posted to Hillbilly Highways on 5/9/19 and Amazon, Goodreads, and Litsy on 5/16/19:

There are two basic problems with academic books for a popular audience. The first is that the academic writing is frequently atrocious. The second is that the topic is often very narrow. I am glad to report that the first is not an issue with Wilkerson’s book. The prose is competent, if pedestrian, and Wilkerson avoids the jargon-laden incoherence that has overtaken the social sciences. The second isn’t exactly a problem, but there is only so big an audience for a book that talks only about poor, female activists in Kentucky coal country in the wake of the War on Poverty. I might not have picked it up had I appreciated just how narrow the subject matter was, but nevertheless I am glad I did. The result of a narrow focus is a depth that pretty much ensures you will learn something.

“I don’t want to go back to jail, but if it means helping Kentucky and helping my kids, I’ll do it.”

Wilkerson covers a time period that starts with “the top-down, federal War on Poverty from 1964 to 1968,” but her story stretches beyond the short-lived War on Poverty itself to “the grassroots war on poverty reverberated for over a decade.” Appalachia got pulled into the War on Poverty for political reasons, which is about as good as we can expect, I suppose. Appalachia’s perceived (and, for the most part, actual ) whiteness was used to blunt the racial connotations of the anti-poverty program. The War on Poverty may have been much less successful than the New Deal, per Wilkerson, but it had two goals: economic development and “access to health care, food, water, and education.” Importantly, pursuit of this second goal “invited local people to participate in solving problems” with “Community Action Programs (CAPs) [that] made decisions about funding and brought together stakeholders across multicounty regions.”

That second goal allowed the participation of local, poor and working class women like Granny Hager, Edith Easterling, and Eula Hall. Wilkerson specifically focuses on Kentucky coal country. After all, the image that “came to represent the War on Poverty” was taken in eastern Kentucky.

[War on Poverty pic]
[Read more]

Discussion of Appalachia is driven in significant part by such images. There is a sense that outsiders see them as a fair representation of Appalachia. The reaction against that often results in ignoring poor and working class hillbillies entirely. Wilkerson focuses on activists who were “solidly working class” like Edith Easterling.

As the book progresses, the focus shifts from poverty alleviation to welfare activism to employment opportunity. The initial, vigorous push inevitably leads to a conservative backlash. The new programs upset the power structure and political balance in rural counties that were dominated by upper and middle class locals and most of all the coal operators’ associations. They were frequently less opposed to welfare programs than to funds they didn’t control, with the political and social power that comes with it.

This is a story that takes place after the glory days of Appalachian coal. “An out-migration that had begun in the 1920s sped up as war industries attracted workers from Appalachia.” But many of the women who left would return to Appalachia (Edith Easterling worked in a munitions factory in Michigan during WWII). The pull from industrial opportunities would be complemented by a push from reduced opportunities in the coal mines due to increased mechanization. Violence over the mines, though, continued. And the people of the region were left with little to show for it. The broader area still “lagged behind in their access to electricity, plumbing, and paved roads.”

Wilkerson writes plainly but doesn’t break from orthodoxy. You get some things you come to expect from contemporary academic writing. “Democratic” is used to mean generically good. “Capitalist” is used to mean generically bad. “Neoliberalism” is used as an epithet. Mostly this is irrelevant, although sometimes it hurts Wilkerson’s argument. She expects the reader to accept “anticommunist” as bad. I suspect she is right—her narrative betrays no communist sympathy, interest, or even inclination among the female poverty activists on which she focuses—but given this was during the Cold War and given (as she admits) the National Miners’ Union had communist backing, we can’t dismiss anticommunist motivation out of hand.

On the other hand, I learned a useful term—“social reproduction”—I might not have been exposed to otherwise. Borrowing another scholar’s definition, Wilkerson describes social reproduction as the “array of activities and relationships involved in maintaining people both on a daily basis and intergenerationally.” Wilkerson adds that “[t]hese activities include raising and socializing children, caring for oneself, preparing food, cleaning living quarters, buying consumer goods, and maintaining ties of family and kin. The majority of this labor—both paid and unpaid—has historically fallen to women.”

Wilkerson’s pinched view of capitalism causes her to misuse the term, though. The idea that capitalism “strain[s] and threaten[s] social reproduction” would come as news to anyone who owns a washing machine. The idea that capitalism cannot “sustain life” would come as news to anyone who has watched capitalism allow hundreds of millions of people to lift themselves out of extreme poverty over the past few decades. But it is a useful term, nonetheless, and Wilkerson is right that caregiving labor and social reproduction are both a background condition of possibility for capitalism and underappreciated.

I don’t mean to say that capitalism—especially as practiced by coal companies in Appalachia—isn’t vulnerable to criticism. Rather that you can’t effectively criticize aspects of capitalism if you fundamentally don’t understand it. That, though, is no real criticism of the book. Wilkerson gives us enough information to draw conclusions of our own.

The poverty of the area and the informal role of the women who star in Wilkerson’s book lead them to wear many different hats over the course of the book: mine picketer, community organizer, unofficial social worker, driving instructor, preserver of mountain culture, agitator against strip mining, and coal miner.

[Female coal miner pic]
[Linda King outside a mine in Big Stone Gap, Virginia]

Wilkerson’s isn’t a story about unions, but the unions and antipoverty activists were natural allies, and unions appear regularly. The unions, at least, rarely had interests that diverged from those of the antipoverty activists. The same could not be said about other groups. The local, female, anti-poverty activists faced internal as well as external obstacles.

There were complaints about activists who “cared more about their ‘theories’ than about working on the major issues confronting Appalachians” (an evergreen issue). There were tensions between insider and outsider activists over, for example, the Vietnam War. When the Appalachian Volunteers chose to keep an activist from California over her, Edith Easterling was deeply offended. Wilkerson points to her belief it “was a sign that the organization no longer valued local people’s opinions and leadership.” I would add that Easterling was quick to return to a hillbilly suspicion of outsiders, even after having worked with the Appalachian Volunteers for years.

To the extent the women of the book can fairly be labeled feminist, they looked very different from the more prominent feminists of the day. There was a sharp divide between the working-class feminism they represented and the “middle-class feminists who shaped policy decisions.” The hillbilly women were old-school, looking “more like the ‘social justice feminists’ who were active between the 1930s and the 1960s than they did second-wave feminists.”

The “grassroots war on poverty” that started with the top-down War on Poverty and continued after it sputtered out are a good reminder that big programs still have to be run at the local level, and much of the knowledge and motivation to make them work only exists in local communities. Local poor people provide not only necessary knowledge and motivation but democratic legitimacy.

So what does this mean for the debate between Hillbilly Elegy and Appalachian Reckoning over “structural” causes of poverty? Local poor, of all people, understand that culture is relevant to poverty. Does an antipoverty activist making a distinction between “sorry families” and respectable ones really sound all that different from complaints by Kentucky governor Louie Nunn that poor people who felt entitled to welfare lacked self-respect? Groups working to provide legal services to the poor noted that many people from the most rural areas thought “they have greater measures of some rights (such as public assistance) than they actually have.” Poor people who are there don’t have the luxury of messy, embarrassing, awkward facts just because they don’t accord with their theories.

Beyond the core theme, there is a lot in here, including tidbits from a rich, often ugly history that go beyond the narrow subject of the book and should be of interest to any general student of Appalachia and hillbilly studies.

Wilkerson describes an African-American community with no roads—they had to get to town by taking a boat down the river—but that didn’t stop arsonists from burning down their schoolhouse.

“All but three of the adult men in” Fraterville, Tennessee died in a Coal Creek Company mine in 1902, “leaving behind 1200 widows and children.”

Edith Easterling’s grandmother caught a neighbor who was so hungry he snuck into her house and ate lard out of a bucket in her kitchen (her grandmother fixed him some food and sent him home with more for his wife and kids).

Kentucky had its own Un-American Activities Committees, and it had a sedition law that the Supreme Court of the United States ruled unconstitutional.

David Duke held a Klan rally in Harlan County “on the property of an antiunion coal operator.”

One reason coal companies fought unionization so hard in Appalachia was to offset much higher freight costs. It seems obvious in retrospect, but I can see how I missed it. I am more interested than Appalachia than in coal in general, and the violence that resulted from those strenuous anti-union efforts has made coal and Appalachia almost synonymous in the US.

In the end, I am plenty glad I picked up To Live Here, You Have to Fight (what a title!). Wilkerson picked a fascinating topic that is surely underserved in the existing literature (the book was adapted from her dissertation, so her first priority was advancing the literature). In exploring that topic, Wilkerson avoids allowing academic theories of her own to lead her to erase the lived experiences of hillbillies. Others insist the hillbilly reputation for violence is entirely a stereotype; Wilkerson implicitly acknowledges it in her title. How could she not? Her story is one of feisty women in a place that seems to breed them. Telling the story of these remarkable women requires a greater comfort level with them than their own culture offered.

So it is a narrow work. It starts with the War on Poverty and ends in the 70s with the move toward focusing on employment rather than caregiving. It examines one gender (female), one class (working class, really, not even the poor), in one very specific region (Kentucky coal country). But, for the reader willing to dig a bit deeper, it should be of interest not only for students of Appalachia and hillbilly studies, but also students of the history of feminism, community organizing, the War on Poverty, and the labor movement.

3.5 of 5 Stars.

Disclosure: I received a review copy of To Live Here You Have to Fight via NetGalley.

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This book is more academic in nature and seems to be very much like a dissertation. I must honestly say I only skimmed a lot of the political detail but it seems the author did a lot of research into this project.

The most interesting part of the book was the stories of the strong women who sought change and helped their people in Appalach. I would have preferred to read more biography of them rather than the political manutia. (Especially the Easterling women) I gave 4 stars because the author did apparently work hard on the political details and politicians involved, but they were uninteresting to me.

I was aware that mountain people had a hard life, but I had no idea of the reality. I was impressed with the women who rose up and battled the establishment for their families.

**This book would make a great study for a political science class or Southern or Appalachian history class.

!!!!Not a book for the casual reader.!!!

Thank you to the author, NetGalley and the publisher for the ARC for an honest opinion. The opinions expressed are my own.

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Avery well written and well researched book on the struggles that women have always had to deal with in the south. It was very compelling to know that someone else agrees with what I always thought of the women in my past, that they are strong, independant, and the main stay of their families. I have already recommended this book to many in my family.

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This is a review of To Live Here You Have To Fight by Jessica Wilkerson. As an initial matter I felt as if I was reading her dissertation as opposed to a book. To that end, it is thoroughly researched.

While I enjoyed learning about the strong women of Appalachia, the style of the book rendered was could have been a compelling read, rather tedious.

I would recommend this book to anyone wanting to learn more about the efforts of the women of Appalachia to improve their community for their fellow citizens.

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The author did a great job of writing about a period in our history that many do not know too much about. I found myself wanting to learn more after reading this book and spent time researching online. Definitely recommend this one!

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To Live Here, You Have To Fight
By: Jessica Wilkerson
University of Illinois Press
Nonfiction (Adult), Politics
Publish Date 30 December 2018 280 pages
#ToLiveHereYouHaveToFight #NetGalley
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There is no way to sugar coat this book. This book was really boring. The author did a lot of research to back up her findings. In fact the last 22% of the book ha all of her sources.
At first I thought the book was going to be great because she started off with a story that got me hooked and I couldn't wait to find out more about the person and her life. Then it went into facts about the Appalachian Mountains and the miners and the women.
I struggled reading this book. I came real close to DNFing it. The only two reasons I didn't is because they wanted my honest review on this book and the author did a lot of research to write this book.
I gave this book 1 star and unless you are into a book that only really goes into fact then read it but otherwise I don't recommend this book.

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This was not an easy book to read. It originated as a Thesis paper and is very academic in nature. The author did a tremendous amount of research and the only reason I gave it a four instead of five because sometimes I felt that I was reading the same information over and over again. This book is actual facts and not embellished stories. I have to say this book in many ways is an eye opener. Many events at that time period I was not aware of. A number of times I got angry and disgusted by the way Politician, Judges and Law Enforcement empowered the rich and sided with the mine owners. Degrading the woman fighting for better life conditions by labeling them as communist or racial motivated. Harassment of the woman and families that included getting arrested on drummed up charges. The woman portrayed in this book where amazing that became heavily invested out of necessity for themselves and their community. I highly recommend this book anybody that wants to learn the facts.

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Well-written, full of interesting and unexpected stories. Highly recommended if you enjoy history and are from the Appalachian region.

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This book was obviously well researched with the author impressing her research on the reader. The author had an agenda to proclaim and made her case over and over again. I’m guessing that this was written in response to some sort of “publish or perish” dictum.

I received this Kindle edition as an ARC from NetGalley and the publisher, University of Illinois Press, in exchange for an honest review.

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This was a great examination of women in Appalachia. Unfortunately, I believe it is too academic in nature for my public library, but I will keep it in mind for people who had issues with Vance's Hillbilly Elegy.

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