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Hillbilly Women: Mountain Women Speak of Struggle and Joy in Southern Appalachia
Resource ID: 3192
Type: book chapter, non-fiction, book
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- UPDATED: 6.17.2025
- status: to be worked, high-priority
- Melungeons, women, regional
- culture
author:
Kathy Kahn
editor:
n/a
publisher:
date:
1973
ISBN:
9780385014113
pages:
230
notes:
This book contains a chapter (p. 137 - Doubleday, 1973) titled 'What Ain't Called Melungeons is Called Hillbillies' by Ellen Rector of Sneedville, TN
contents:
description:
“This book tells what it means to be a woman when you are poor, when you are proud, and when you are a hillbilly.”
First published in 1973, Skye Moody’s Hillbilly Women shares the stunning and raw oral histories of nineteen women in twentieth-century Southern Appalachia, from their day-to-day struggles for survival to the personal triumphs of their hardscrabble existence. They are wives, widows, and daughters of coal miners; factory hands, tobacco graders, cotton mill workers, and farmers; and women who value honest labor, self-esteem, and dignity. Shining a much-needed light into a misunderstood culture and identity, the stories within reflect the universally human struggle to live meaningful and dignified lives.
First published in 1973, Skye Moody’s Hillbilly Women shares the stunning and raw oral histories of nineteen women in twentieth-century Southern Appalachia, from their day-to-day struggles for survival to the personal triumphs of their hardscrabble existence. They are wives, widows, and daughters of coal miners; factory hands, tobacco graders, cotton mill workers, and farmers; and women who value honest labor, self-esteem, and dignity. Shining a much-needed light into a misunderstood culture and identity, the stories within reflect the universally human struggle to live meaningful and dignified lives.
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