Description
Book SynopsisSuitable for students and scholars of American music, gender and sexuality, class, and pop culture, this book looks at how class and gender identity play out in one of America's most culturally and politically charged forms of popular music.
Trade Review"This is one of the most intellectually stimulating books I have read in a long time." -- Benita Wolters-Fredlund Notes Rednecks, Queers, and Country Music is an intellectual tour de force that offers a nuanced exploration of the ways that white middle-class attitudes toward country music and white working-class modes of discourse have led to the marginalization of the white working class in political and cultural discourse. -- Travis Stimeling Journal of the Society for American Music "Rednecks, Queers, and Country Music" is a far-ranging, multi-layered analysis, full of provocative insights, packaged in crisp, engaging prose" -- John Hayes Agricultural History "Hubbs uses country music to uncover longstanding alliances between white working class and queer subcultures. Such alliances have been obscured by stereotypes of low-status whites, or "rednecks," as uniformly bigoted and homophobic, and of "middle America" as homogenous and provincial. Hubbs trenchantly critiques middle-class disavowals of working class culture (exemplified by the phrase "I'll listen to anything but country"), and meticulously analyzes songs by the Foo Fighters, Gretchen Wilson, David Allen Coe, and others. Hubbs writes that "To hear country on its own terms, we must seek out the particular values and devalued culture of the working class." IASPM-US (2015 Woody Guthrie Award, Honorable Mention)
Table of ContentsList of Illustrations Acknowledgments INTRO PART I. Rednecks and Country Music 1. Anything but Country 2. Sounding the Working-Class Subject PART II. Rednecks, Country Music, and the Queer 3. Gender Deviance and Class Rebellion in "Redneck Woman" 4. "Fuck Aneta Briant" and the Queer Politics of Being Political OUTRO Notes References Subject Index Song Index