Worked to the Bone: A History of Race, Class, Power, and Privilege in Kentucky

Worked to the Bone: A History of Race, Class, Power, and Privilege in Kentucky

by Pem Davidson Buck
Worked to the Bone: A History of Race, Class, Power, and Privilege in Kentucky

Worked to the Bone: A History of Race, Class, Power, and Privilege in Kentucky

by Pem Davidson Buck

Paperback(New Edition)

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Overview

Worked to the Bone is a provocative examination of race and class in the United States and the mechanics of inequality. In an elegant and accessible style that combines thoroughly documented sociological insight with her own compelling personal narrative, Pem Buck illustrates the ways in which constructions of race and the promise of white privilege have been used at specific historical moments to divide those in the United Statesspecifically, in two Kentucky countieswho might have otherwise acted on common class interests. From the initial creation of the concept of "whiteness" and early strategies focused on convincing Europeans, regardless of their class position, to identify with the eliteto believe that what was good for the elite was good for themto the moment between 1750 and 1800 when most people who were identified by their European descent finally came to believe that skin color was as integral to their identity as gender, the promise of white privilege underpinned the Kentucky system.
Pem Buck examines the long term effects of these developments and discusses their impact on the lives of working people in Kentucky. She also analyzes the role of local tobacco-growing and corporate elites in the underdevelopment of the state, highlighting the ways in which relationships between poor white and poor black working people were continuously manipulated to facilitate that process.
Documentary material includes speeches, songs, photographs, charts, cartoons, and ads presented in a large, visually appealing format.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781583670477
Publisher: Monthly Review Press
Publication date: 06/01/2001
Edition description: New Edition
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 7.00(w) x 8.00(h) x 0.75(d)

About the Author

Pem Davidson Buck is Professor Emerita of Anthropology at Elizabethtown Community and Technical College in Kentucky. Her work has focused on whiteness, on the discourses of inequality, and most recently on theorizing the carceral state and the relationship between state formation and punishment. She is the author of Worked to the Bone: Race, Class, Power, and Privilege in Kentucky and In/Equality: An Alternative Anthropology.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgmentsvii
Introduction: The View From Under the Sink1
1Making Sweat Trickle Up: Organizing First Steps Toward Underdevelopment in the U.S. South11
2Derailing Rebellion: Inventing White Privilege23
3Life in Black and White35
4Resisting Trickle-up While Accommodating Whiteness51
5Forks in the Road65
6Gender, Whiteness, and the Psychological Wage79
7Jim Crow, Underdevelopment, and the Reinforcement of the Tottering Dainage System89
8Critiquing Capital: The Wannabes103
9National Capital and the Waning of Independence117
10The Redefinition of the Producer Egalitarian Ethic129
11The Klan and the Manufacture of Middle-Class Consent: Splitting the White Working Class, Terrorizing the Black141
12Brown Shirts/White Sheets: Fascism and Middle-Class Demotion155
13National Capital, the Retreat from Fascist Processes and the Sugar-Coated Contract165
14Local Elite Choices and the Reorganized Drainage System: "Old South" and "New South"177
15Hooking in the Rest of the World: The Reorganization of Drainage in the New World Order189
16The Resumption of Fascist Processes203
17Whiteness: The Continuing Evolution of a Smokescreen221
Endnotes229
Index271
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