Country Music Doesn’t Deserve Its Conservative Reputation
Musician Nick Shoulders talks to Jacobin about a genre that has long broadcast the struggles and aspirations of working people.
Ryan Switzer is a PhD candidate in sociology at Stockholm University. He researches right-wing politics in welfare states.
Musician Nick Shoulders talks to Jacobin about a genre that has long broadcast the struggles and aspirations of working people.
Urban elites’ contempt for rural America is centuries old — but so is rural populist resistance.
For thousands of years, organized peasants have challenged rural exploitation — and even toppled governments.
After stints in Haight-Ashbury, as many as one million hippies headed for the hills. Some of their communes have persisted into the present.
The South has long remained a nearly impenetrable citadel for labor. Fresh off the success of its Big Three strike, the United Auto Workers wants to storm the castle.
The Eastern Bloc’s “Ostern” filmmaking turned the mythology of the American Western on its head.
In the golden age of American political cartooning, Populist artists lampooned injustices that their contemporaries overlooked.
The language of land management.
Send your crop report to [email protected].
During the Great Depression, black sharecroppers and the Communist Party waged war against tenant farming in the South.
While free love, weed, and tie-dye might not have been his bag, even the young Bernard Sanders of Brooklyn, NY, tried a life of living off the land. It didn’t work out.
The only thing more American than living and working on a farm is pretending you do.
The rural divide is deep and, in many cases, based on real abandonment by liberal technocrats. More than just new policies, Democrats need a new approach to rural voters.
Yellowstone sells a fantasy of rural America — and conservatism — no different from any other prime-time soap opera.
Some of the most frightening beasts of American folklore may be hiding out in your neck of the woods.
In today’s Europe, the exploitation of migrant workers puts food on the table.
Since the 1960s, Israel has planted millions of trees across the Naqab desert and the West Bank. The afforestation effort greenwashes ethnic cleansing — and literally covers up the evidence.