Beyond the Mountains
Commodifying Appalachian Environments
Title Details
Pages: 282
Illustrations: 38 b&w images
Trim size: 6.000in x 9.000in
Formats
Paperback
Pub Date: 11/15/2018
ISBN: 9-780-8203-5396-8
List Price: $34.95
Hardcover
Pub Date: 11/15/2018
ISBN: 9-780-8203-4487-4
List Price: $104.95
Web PDF
Pub Date: 11/15/2018
ISBN: 9-780-8203-5397-5
List Price: $104.95
Related Subjects
SOCIAL SCIENCE / Sociology / Rural
HISTORY / United States / General
Beyond the Mountains
Commodifying Appalachian Environments
How Appalachian natural resources encouraged economic, social, and cultural connections
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Beyond the Mountains explores the ways in which Appalachia often served as a laboratory for the exploration and practice of American conceptions of nature. The region operated alternately as frontier, wilderness, rural hinterland, region of subsistence agriculture, bastion of yeoman farmers, and place to experiment with modernization. In these various takes on the southern mountains, scattered across time and space, both mountain residents and outsiders consistently believed that the region’s environment made Appalachia distinctive, for better or worse.
With chapters dedicated to microhistories focused on particular commodities, Drew A. Swanson builds upon recent Appalachian studies scholarship, emphasizing the diversity of a region so long considered a homogenous backwater. While Appalachia has a recognizable and real coherence rooted in folkways, agriculture, and politics (among other things), it is also a region of varied environments, people, and histories. These discrete stories are, however, linked through the power of conceptualizing nature and work together to reveal the ways in which ideas and uses of nature often created a sense of identity in Appalachia. Delving into the environmental history of the region reveals that Appalachian environments, rather than separating the mountains from the broader world, often served to connect the region to outside places.
Swanson has a way with words. . . .[And] has given us a valuable and engrossing addition to
Appalachian scholarship.
—Paul Salstrom, North Carolina Historical Review