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Confronting Appalachian Stereotypes: Back Talk from an Appalachian Region ed. by Dwight B. Billings, Gurney Norman, and Katherine Ledford (review) Diana Hays Appalachian Heritage, Volume 27, Number 3, Summer 1999, pp. 57-59 (Review) Published by The University of North Carolina Press DOI: https://doi.org/10.1353/aph.1999.0068 For additional information about this article https://muse.jhu.edu/article/435519/summary Access provided at 19 Feb 2020 19:59 GMT from JHU Libraries surely have made the county a garbage dumping-ground for a wide area. The remarkable thing about Grammich's Magoffin County study is the superficiality of his sources, which include only his own interviews, the local Salyersville Independent, and the Louisville and Lexington press. In spite of his careful study of fundamentalism and church responses to modern American social and economic problems generally, he has entered the world of Eastern Kentucky politics without consulting any of the knowledgeable regional scholars and observers- Bill Bishop, Paul Blanchard, Tom Gish, Steve Fisher, Bill Weinberg, Grady Stumbo, Neil Peirce, David Sutton, or even Harry Caudill. In a manuscript replete with earlier references to such scholars as Richard Hofstader, Wayne Flynt, Clifford Geertz, Lawrence Goodwyn, David Corbin, Martin Marty, Richard Niebuhr, Liston Pope and Max Weber, for a political scientist to make an excursion
Appalachian Review – University of North Carolina Press
Published: Jan 8, 2014
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