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Hope and contradictions in Appalachia

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WVU student Tristan Dennis warms up before a concert at Washington Lands Elementary School, Marshall County, WV. Credit: Raymond Thompson.

Travis Stimeling is an associate professor of music history at West Virginia University, a series editor and author with WVU Press, and a member of the WVU Humanities Center advisory board. He was instrumental in helping bring Elizabeth Catte, the press’s new editor at large, to WVU for this week’s talk cosponsored with the humanities center and the David C. Hardesty Jr. Festival of Ideas. Here he responds to Catte’s presentation.

Earlier this week, WVU Press’s new editor at large Elizabeth Catte visited Morgantown to participate in WVU’s Festival of Ideas and to serve as a much-needed counterpoint to Hillbilly Elegy author J.D. Vance, who spoke at the university on February 21. Vance’s talk reinforced familiar negative stereotypes about Appalachia at nearly every turn—we’re deliberately ignorant, too lazy to work, and too dependent on government assistance to want to do anything to take ownership over our lives—and blamed “environmental” and “cultural” factors for the region’s problems. On the other hand, Catte—who holds a Ph.D. in public history from Middle Tennessee State University—argued that these negative stereotypes have often been deployed by people who did not always have the best interest of Appalachians at heart, including missionaries, extractive industry leaders, politicians, and even eugenicists.

In her carefully researched new book, What You Are Getting Wrong About Appalachia, she pushes back against these stereotypes and challenges us—even those of us who are deeply committed to building inclusive, compassionate, and democratic communities in Appalachia—to step back for a moment and consider the ways that our work might implicitly work against our broader goals. At the conclusion of her talk, Catte challenged us to counter negative stereotypes and narratives of Appalachian decline by sharing our own Appalachian stories and by creating spaces where others can do the same. To that end, I’d like to offer a few examples of my Appalachia in the hope that you, too, might do the same.

My Appalachia is:

My Appalachia is an Appalachia of contradictions. But unlike Vance’s desolate and hopeless Appalachia, my Appalachia is, like Catte’s, a hopeful one. It’s one in which people still check in on their neighbors and gather together to share a few songs, regardless of their faith, politics, race, or class. It’s one in which I, as a straight white man, can stand proudly in solidarity with my queer neighbors to demand equal treatment under the law and learn more about how to support other people’s life, liberty, and pursuit of happiness through compassionate listening and deliberate action. It’s one where cutting-edge scientific research is conducted every day and where future technologies and traditional folkways both provide guidance toward a bright tomorrow.

As a professor at WVU, I encounter new opportunities to be hopeful every day. I am hopeful when I look into the eyes of a student who has come to Morgantown despite it being ten times bigger than any other town they’ve visited because they want to learn more about the world and its ways. I am hopeful when a student comes to my office to learn more about the musicians from their home county so that they can understand their own tangled roots. And I am hopeful when a student from out of state comes to me at the end of a long tour through the southern coalfields to tell me that she wants to find a way to make a life here. At the end of the day, I feel sad for J.D. Vance. He doesn’t see what I see. And from up here in the mountains, the view is stunning.

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