معرفی کتاب «Rural Radicals : Righteous Rage in the American Grain» نوشتهٔ Stock, Catherine McNicol، منتشرشده توسط نشر Cornell University Press در سال 2018. این کتاب در فرمت pdf، زبان انگلیسی ارائه شده است. «Rural Radicals : Righteous Rage in the American Grain» در دستهٔ بدون دستهبندی قرار دارد.
Through its history, populism has meant hope and progress, as well as hate and a desire to turn back the clock on American history. In her new preface, Catherine McNicol Stock provides an update and overview of the conservative face of rural America. She paints a comprehensive portrait of a long line of rural activists whose crusades against big government, bug business, and big banks sometimes spoke in a language of progressive populism and sometimes in a language of hate and bigotry. __Rural Radicals__ breaks down the populism expressed by activists, confronts our conventional notions of right and left, and allows us to understand political factionalism differently. When terrorists blew up the Alfred R. Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City, a shocked nation could scarcely imagine that the perpetrators were home-grown. If they were, Catherine McNicol Stock explains, they participated in a long tradition of rural extremism. The arrest of Timothy McVeigh, the alleged perpetrator, gave terrorism a face, and it turned out to be the white-skinned, blue-eyed, clean-shaven face of a small-town boy who had served in the Gulf War. The network of militiamen, conspiracists, survivalists, and white supremacists suddenly visible to media attention had been there all along, Stock suggests. They are heirs to a tradition even older than the country itself, characteristically angry and frequently violent, rendering patriotism as intolerance. . As early as 1676, rural Virginians took up arms to protest what they considered economic and political injustices, and the fierce protective responses did not stop with the Revolution. Stock examines recurring themes in rural radical movements, including anti-federalism, white supremacy, populism, and vigilantism. These themes suggest to her some of the seemingly contradictory responses implicit in rural discontent. The politically conservative fear of outside power and authority in the form of government, corporations, international institutions, experts, and the media is juxtaposed with the potentially democratic desire to protect and revive community, culture, and the cooperative tradition. Stock believes we need to understand both the historic roots and the diverse manifestations of rural radicalism in order to make some sense of the action that tore a hole in this country's heartland in the spring of 1995.
Through its history, populism has meant hope and progress, as well as hate and a desire to turn back the clock on American history. In her new preface, Catherine McNicol Stock provides an update and overview of the conservative face of rural America. She paints a comprehensive portrait of a long line of rural activists whose crusades against big government, bug business, and big banks sometimes spoke in a language of progressive populism and sometimes in a language of hate and bigotry. Rural Radicals breaks down the populism expressed by activists, confronts our conventional notions of right and left, and allows us to understand political factionalism differently.
This text originally appeared in the wake of the bombing of the Murrah Federal Building in Oklahoma City on April 19, 1995. Written for a general audience, it asks where these 'angry, white, rural men' came from and how their movements and grievances both stayed the same and changed over time Contents Preface to the Paperback Edition Notes to the Preface to the Paperback Edition Preface NTRODUCTION 1. THE POLITICS OF PRODUCERISM 2. THE CULTURE OF VIGILANTISM 3. RURAL RADICALS IN OUR TIME A NOTE ON METHOD A NOTE ON SOURCES NOTES INDEX IN JULY 1994, the New York Times began reporting a new "insurrection in, of all places, Iowa."