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Reading Appalachia From Left To Right Conservatives And The 1974 Kanawha County Textbook Controversy Carol Mason

  • SKU: BELL-51382788
Reading Appalachia From Left To Right Conservatives And The 1974 Kanawha County Textbook Controversy Carol Mason
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Reading Appalachia From Left To Right Conservatives And The 1974 Kanawha County Textbook Controversy Carol Mason instant download after payment.

Publisher: Cornell University Press
File Extension: PDF
File size: 11.26 MB
Pages: 254
Author: Carol Mason
ISBN: 9780801459856, 0801459850
Language: English
Year: 2010

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Reading Appalachia From Left To Right Conservatives And The 1974 Kanawha County Textbook Controversy Carol Mason by Carol Mason 9780801459856, 0801459850 instant download after payment.

In Reading Appalachia from Left to Right, Carol Mason examines the legacies of a pivotal 1974 curriculum dispute in West Virginia that heralded the rightward shift in American culture and politics. At a time when black nationalists and white conservatives were both maligned as extremists for opposing education reform, the wife of a fundamentalist preacher who objected to new language-arts textbooks featuring multiracial literature sparked the yearlong conflict. It was the most violent textbook battle in America, inspiring mass marches, rallies by white supremacists, boycotts by parents, and strikes by coal miners. Schools were closed several times due to arson and dynamite while national and international news teams descended on Charleston.A native of Kanawha County, Mason infuses local insight into this study of historically left-leaning protesters ushering in cultural conservatism. Exploring how reports of the conflict as a hillbilly feud affected all involved, she draws on substantial archival research and interviews with Klansmen, evangelicals, miners, bombers, and businessmen, a who, like herself, were residents of Kanawha County during the dispute. Mason investigates vulgar accusations of racism that precluded a richer understanding of how ethnicity, race, class, and gender blended together as white protesters set out to protect "our children's souls."In the process, she demonstrates how the significance of the controversy goes well beyond resistance to social change on the part of Christian fundamentalists or a cultural clash between elite educators and working-class citizens. The alliances, tactics, and political discourses that emerged in the Kanawha Valley in 1974 crossed traditional lines, inspiring innovations in neo-Nazi organizing, propelling Christian conservatism into the limelight, and providing models for women of the New Right.

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