Description
Book SynopsisMade famous in the 1976 documentary Harlan County USA, this pocket of Appalachian coal country has been home to generations of miners--and to some of the most bitter labor battles of the 20th century. It has also produced a rich tradition of protest songs and a wealth of fascinating culture and custom that has remained largely undiscovered by outsiders, until now.They Say in Harlan County is not a book about coal miners so much as a dialogue in which more than 150 Harlan County women and men tell the story of their region, from pioneer times through the dramatic strikes of the 1930s and ''70s, up to the present. Alessandro Portelli draws on 25 years of original interviews to take readers into the mines and inside the lives of those who work, suffer, and often die in them--from black lung, falling rock, suffocation, or simply from work that can be literally backbreaking. The book is structured as a vivid montage of all these voices--stoic, outraged, grief-stricken, defiant--skillfully interwoven with documents from archives, newspapers, literary works, and the author''s own participating and critical voice. Portelli uncovers the whole history and memory of the United States in this one symbolic place, through settlement, civil war, slavery, industrialization, immigration, labor conflict, technological change, migration, strip mining, environmental and social crises, and resistance. And as hot-button issues like mountain-top removal and the use of clean coal continue to hit the news, the history of Harlan County--especially as seen through the eyes of those who lived it--is becoming increasingly important. With rare emotional immediacy, gripping narratives, and unforgettable characters, They Say in Harlan County tells the real story of a culture, the resilience of its people, and the human costs of coal mining.
Trade ReviewThey Say in Harlan County is a multi-vocal exploration of three centuries of Harlan County history: foundation narratives of eighteenth century conquest and pioneer settlement through tales of the Civil War and its aftermath of industrialization, vivid recollections of racial violence and labor struggles, stories of the mid-twentieth century devastation of the region by strip-mining, outmigration, the War on Poverty, the corruption of the United Mine Worker leadership, and the struggle over compensation for black lung. * Western Folklore *
By any standards, this is a remarkable and compelling work. * J. D. A. Widdowson, Centre for English Traditional Heritage *
Table of ContentsIntroduction: Harlan County, 1964-2007: A love story ; Chapter 1: The Bear and the Sycamore Tree ; Chapter 2: Of Hardship and Love ; Chapter 3: Wars and Peace ; Chapter 4: These Signs Shall Follow Them ; Chapter 5: Flush Times and Rough Times ; Chapter 6: A Space of Their Own ; Chapter 7: Miner's Life ; Chapter 8: Identities ; Chapter 9: No Neutrals there ; Chapter 10: God, Guns, and Guts ; Chapter 11: Harlan on Our Minds ; Chapter 12: Exodus ; Chapter 13: The Other America ; Chapter 14: Democracy and the Mines ; Chapter 15: Staying Alive ; People I Owe ; Notes ; The Narrators ; Index