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SOC 222: Sociology of Appalachian Culture

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1. SOC 222: Sociology of Appalachian Culture. Our Appalachia ... Children more leisure time. Farms: similar to preindustrial gender roles. 10. Family & Kinship ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: SOC 222: Sociology of Appalachian Culture


1
SOC 222 Sociology of Appalachian Culture
  • Our Appalachia Part II
  • Social Institutions in Industrial Society

2
The Economy Work
  • More specialized
  • Not everyone farmersmost do have gardens
  • Coal mining logging
  • Dominated in central App
  • Coal fuels industrialization of nation
  • Factories also established
  • Southern, central App textile mills, sewing,
    others
  • Northern App variety

3
The Economy Work
  • Change in transportation required to
    industrialize
  • Accessibility an issue in 20th C
  • Railroads necessary to get timber coal out
  • Later roads built for autos but gradually
  • Most mountainous, esp in central App remains
    isolated until end of 20th C

4
The Economy Work
  • Gradually changed from barter to money-based
    economy
  • Barter/exchange still used when cash is scarce
    (poor, unemployed, etc)
  • Script used in coal camps
  • Coal camps paternalistic
  • Created dependency with script

5
The Economy Work
  • Exploitation common
  • Land mineral rights
  • owned mostly by outsiders
  • Those who lived on land, farmed often ignorant of
    their rights stripped of their rights
  • Smaller communities tend to be one-industry base
  • Boom bust economy

6
The Economy Work
  • Exploitation common (cont)
  • Work in mines, factories dangerous
  • Injuries
  • Black, brown lung
  • Union organizing UMW

7
The Economy Work
  • Conditions led to poverty
  • Welfare benefits dependency more common in
    1960s to present
  • Migration to get better jobs
  • Family to other coal camp
  • Family to nearby city
  • Families to northern cities
  • Father to city

8
The Economy Work
  • Conditions led to
  • poverty (cont)
  • Experimented w/economic development programs
  • Federal/regional TVA, ARC, OEO (War on Poverty)
  • Local Grass roots nonprofits emerge

9
Family Kinship
  • Still fundamentally patriarchal
  • Coal camps division of labor
  • Husband/father breadwinner gives him economic
    power
  • Wife/mother domestic manager
  • Dominates day-to-day care-giving since husband
    rarely at home
  • But less economic productivity and power
  • Children more leisure time
  • Farms similar to preindustrial gender roles

10
Family Kinship
  • Patriarchal (cont)
  • Towns cities
  • Factories, businesses, service jobs, professions
  • Wife more likely have job more democratic
    especially in last ½ of 20th C

11
Family Kinship
  • Nuclear family smaller
  • Needs to be more mobile to work coal or factories
  • Death rate lower
  • Birth rate lower
  • Extended family less important
  • Often still lives nearby
  • But may not be as physically close

12
Religion Church
  • Denominations Variety
  • Fundamentalist, traditional in rural
  • Mainline in town, city
  • Missionaries from outside App
  • Save the poor, ignorant
  • Settlement schools

13
Schools Education
  • Informal education at home
  • Still gender specific
  • Formal education more important
  • Industrial jobs required more
  • Reading, writing, arithmetic, conformity
  • Consolidation
  • By 1970s one-room school a memory
  • Larger schools but more options
  • Live in hollers school farther from home
  • Higher dropout rate than nation

14
Politics Government
  • Federal government became more important
  • Welfare
  • TVA, etc.
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