Hillbilly Highway: The Transappalachian Migration and the Making of a White Working Class

Hillbilly Highway: The Transappalachian Migration and the Making of a White Working Class

by Max Fraser
Hillbilly Highway: The Transappalachian Migration and the Making of a White Working Class

Hillbilly Highway: The Transappalachian Migration and the Making of a White Working Class

by Max Fraser

Hardcover

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Overview

The largely untold story of the great migration of white southerners to the industrial Midwest and its profound and enduring political and social consequences

Over the first two-thirds of the twentieth century, as many as eight million whites left the economically depressed southern countryside and migrated to the booming factory towns and cities of the industrial Midwest in search of work. The "hillbilly highway" was one of the largest internal relocations of poor and working people in American history, yet it has largely escaped close study by historians. In Hillbilly Highway, Max Fraser recovers the long-overlooked story of this massive demographic event and reveals how it has profoundly influenced American history and culture—from the modern industrial labor movement and the postwar urban crisis to the rise of today’s white working-class conservatives.

The book draws on a diverse range of sources—from government reports, industry archives, and union records to novels, memoirs, oral histories, and country music—to narrate the distinctive class experience that unfolded across the Transappalachian migration during these critical decades. As the migration became a terrain of both social advancement and marginalization, it knit together white working-class communities across the Upper South and the Midwest—bringing into being a new cultural region that remains a contested battleground in American politics to the present.

The compelling story of an important and neglected chapter in American history, Hillbilly Highway upends conventional wisdom about the enduring political and cultural consequences of the great migration of white southerners in the twentieth century.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780691191119
Publisher: Princeton University Press
Publication date: 09/26/2023
Series: Politics and Society in Modern America , #1
Pages: 336
Sales rank: 93,312
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.30(h) x 1.30(d)

About the Author

Max Fraser is assistant professor of history at the University of Miami. A former journalist, he has written for the Nation and other publications.

What People are Saying About This

From the Publisher

“This remarkably wide-ranging and beautifully written book attacks head-on the accounts of the ‘hillbilly’ popularized by J. D. Vance and others and provides a fundamental reorientation of twentieth-century political, labor, and urban history. In doing so, Max Fraser offers important new insights that help explain the long roots of illiberalism among a group that has become ever more important to the political and economic story of the present.”Lily Geismer, author of Left Behind: The Democrats’ Failed Attempt to Solve Inequality

Hillbilly Highway is the first serious history of the mass migration of millions of poor southern whites into the cities of the Midwest after World War II. Max Fraser skillfully catalogs the experiences of rural transplants, explores class identity, reports on cultural backlash, and shows how these migrants, too often ignored, shaped the politics of welfare. This is an insightful, nuanced, and eye-opening book.”—Nancy Isenberg, author of White Trash: The 400-Year Untold History of Class in America

Hillbilly Highway cuts a revelatory path through modern American history. With razor-sharp analysis and deep empathy, Max Fraser recovers the uneasy story of southern white migrants who transformed the nation’s industrial heartland—where they were often needed but rarely wanted. This is working-class history at its best.”—Jarod Roll, author of Poor Man’s Fortune: White Working-Class Conservatism in American Metal Mining, 1850–1950

“Eloquent and brilliant, Max Fraser’s Hillbilly Highway puts the reader on the road with the poor whites of the mountain South who travelled back and forth between the attachments and memories of home and the displacements and opportunities of Midwestern cities. Fraser’s tremendous achievement is to demonstrate beyond doubt that the Transappalachian Migration is essential for comprehending postwar liberalism, country music, the contradictions of whiteness, and the political realignment of the American working class in the twentieth century.”—Steven Stoll, author of Ramp Hollow: The Ordeal of Appalachia

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