Redneck
Redneck in modern usage, predominantly refers to a particular stereotype of individuals living in Appalachia, the Southern United States, the Ozarks, and later the Rocky Mountain States. The word can be used either as a pejorative or as a matter of pride, depending on context.
Usage of the term redneck generally differs from hick and hillbilly, because rednecks reject or resist assimilation into the dominant culture, while hicks and hillbillies theoretically are isolated from the dominant culture. In this way, the term redneck is similar to the word cracker.
Etymology
Possible Scots-Irish etymologies
The word redneck was first cited in Scotland. In Scotland, the National Covenant and The Solemn League and Covenant (a.k.a. Covenanters) signed documents stating that Scotland desired a Presbyterian Church Government, and rejected the Church of England as their official church (no Anglican congregation was ever accepted as the official church in Scotland). What the Covenanters rejected was episcopacy — rule by bishops — the preferred form of church government in England. Many of the Covenanters signed these documents using their own blood, and many in the movement began wearing red pieces of cloth around their neck to signify their position to the public. They were referred to as rednecks. These Scottish Presbyterians migrated from their lowland Scottish home to Ulster (the northern province of Ireland) during the 17th Century and soon settled in considerable numbers in North America across the 18th Century. Some emigrated directly from Scotland to the American colonies in the late 18th and early 19th-centuries as a result of the Lowland Clearances. This etymological theory holds that since many Scots-Irish Americans who settled in Appalachia and the South were Presbyterian, the term was bestowed upon them and their descendants.
Possible American etymologies
The popular etymology says that the term derives from such individuals having a red neck caused by working outdoors in the sunlight over the course of their lifetime. The effect of decades of direct sunlight on the exposed skin of the back of the neck not only reddens fair skin, but renders it leathery and tough, and typically very wrinkled and spotted by late middle age. Similarly, some historians claim that the term redneck originated in 17th-Century Virginia, because indentured servants were sunburnt while tending plantation crops.
It is clear that by the post-Reconstruction era (after the departure of Federal troops from the American South in 1874-1878), the term had worked its way into popular usage. Several blackface minstrel shows used the word in a derogatory manner, comparing slave life over that of the poor rural whites. This may have much to do with the social, political and economic struggle between Populists, the Redeemers and Republican Carpetbaggers of the post-Civil War South and Appalachia, where the new middle class of the South (professionals, bankers, industrialists) displaced the pre-war planter class as the leaders of the Southern states. The Populist movement, with its message of economic equality, represented a threat to the status quo. The use of a derogative term, such as redneck to belittle the working class, would have assisted in the gradual disenfranchisement of most of the Southern lower class, both black and white, which occurred by 1910.
Another popular theory stems from the use of red bandanas tied around the neck to signify union affiliation during the violent clashes between United Mine Workers and owners between 1910 and 1920.
History
Rednecks are largely descendants of the Ulster-Scots and Lowland Scots immigrants who travelled to North America from Northern Ireland and Scotland in the late 17th and 18th centuries, although some of them are descended from people of Germanic and other stock. The Ulster-Scots had historically settled the major part of Ulster province in northern Ireland, after previous migration from the Scottish Lowlands and Border Country. These pioneering people and their descendants are known in North America as the Scots-Irish.
The "Celtic Thesis" of Forrest McDonald and Grady McWhiney holds that they were basically Celtic (as opposed to Anglo-Saxon), and that all Celtic groups (Scots Irish, Scottish, Welsh and others) were warlike herdsmen, in contrast to the peaceful farmers who predominated in England. James H. Webb (former U.S. Secretary of the Navy) uses this thesis in his book Born Fighting to suggest that the character traits of the Scots Irish — loyalty to kin, mistrust of governmental authority, and military readiness — helped shape the American identity. According to Webb, they were unwelcome in the "civilized" coastal regions and were encouraged by colonial leaders to settle the mountains, as a bulwark against the Indian Nations. Although sometimes hostile to the Indians, they found much in common with them and engaged in trade and cultural exchanges. In the Appalachians they also encountered pockets of Melungeons, English-speaking people of mixed racial origins (black, white, Indian), whom they tolerated and with whom they coexisted.
Over time, they intermarried with Britons from the West Country, another group with Celtic origins, and absorbed members of other groups through the bonds of kinship. Nevertheless, their culture and bloodlines retained their Celtic character. Fiercely independent, and frequently belligerent, rednecks perpetuated old Celtic ideas of honor and clanship. This sometimes led to conflicts such as the Hatfield-McCoy feud in West Virginia and Kentucky.
In colonial times, they were often called rednecks and crackers by English neighbors. As one wrote, "I should explain ... what is meant by Crackers; a name they have got from being great boasters; they are a lawless set of rascalls on the frontiers of Virginia, Maryland, the Carolinas, and Georgia, who often change their places of abode."
The fledgling government inherited a huge debt from the American Revolutionary War. One of the steps taken to pay it down was a tax imposed in 1791 on distilled spirits. Large producers were assessed a tax of six cents a gallon. Smaller distillers, however, most of whom were of Scottish or Irish descent located in the more remote areas, were taxed at a higher rate of nine cents a gallon. These rural settlers were short of cash to begin with, and they lacked any practical means to get their grain to market other than fermenting and distilling it into relatively portable alcoholic spirits. From Pennsylvania to Georgia, the western counties engaged in a campaign of harassment of the federal tax collectors. "Whiskey Boys" also made violent protests in Maryland, Virginia, North and South Carolina, and Georgia. [1] This civil disobedience eventually culminated in armed conflict in the Whiskey Rebellion.
Rednecks, and especially Tennesseeans, are known for their martial spirit. Tennessee is known as the "Volunteer State" for the overwhelming, unexpected number of Tennesseans who volunteered for duty in the War of 1812, the Texas Revolution (including the defense of the Alamo), and especially the Mexican War. During the Civil War, poor whites did most of the fighting and the dying on both sides of the conflict. Although poor Southern whites stood to gain little from secession and were usually ambivalent about the institution of slavery, they were fiercely defensive of their territory and loyal to their homes and families.
Although slaves fared the worst by far, many poor whites had a hard "row to hoe," as well. The disruptions of the Civil War (1861-65) and Reconstruction mired African Americans in a new poverty and dragged many more whites into a similar abyss. Sharecropping and tenant farming trapped families for generations, as did emerging industries, which paid low wages and imposed company-town restrictions (see Carpetbagger). Once-proud yeomen frequently became objects of ridicule, and sometimes they responded angrily and even viciously, often lashing out at blacks in retaliation. Poor whites (meaning, financially destitute) were increasingly labeled "poor white trash" (meaning financially and genetically worse off than others) and worse; “cracker,” "clay eater," "linthead," "peckerwood," "buckra" and especially redneck only scratched the surface of rejection and slander. Northerners and foreigners played this game, but the greatest hostility to poor whites came from their fellow Southerners, sometimes blacks but more often upper-class whites. Generally, the view of poor white Southerners grew more and more negative, especially in modern movies and television, which have often stressed the negative and even the grotesque while reaching huge audiences. Rednecks have borne their full share of this stereotype of lower-class Southern whites who share poverty status with immigrants, blacks, and other minorities.
Although the stereotype of poor white Southerners and Appalachians in the early twentieth century, as portrayed in popular media, was exaggerated and even grotesque, the problem of poverty was very real. The national mobilization of troops in World War I (1917-18) invited comparisons between the South and Appalachia and the rest of the country. Southern and Appalachian whites had less money, less education, and poorer health than white Americans in general. Only Southern blacks had more handicaps. In the 1920s and 1930s matters became worse when the boll weevil and the dust bowl devastated the South's agricultural base and its economy. The Great Depression was a difficult era for the already disadvantaged in the South and Appalachia. In an echo of the Whiskey Rebellion, rednecks escalated their production and bootlegging of moonshine whisky. To deliver it and avoid law-enforcement and tax agents, cars were "souped-up" to create a more maneuverable and faster vehicle. Many of the original drivers of Stock car racing were former bootleggers and "ridge-runners."
World War II (1941-45) began the great economic revival for the South and for Appalachia. In and out of the armed forces, unskilled Southern and Appalachian whites, and many African Americans as well, were trained for industrial and commercial work they had never dreamed of attempting, much less mastering. Military camps grew like mushrooms, especially in Georgia and Texas, and big industrial plants began to appear across the once rural landscape. Soon, blue-collar families from every nook and cranny of the South and Appalachia found their way to white-collar life in metropolitan areas like Atlanta. By the 1960s blacks had begun to share in this progress, but not all rural Southerners and Appalachians were beneficiaries of this recovery.
Author Jim Goad's 1997 book The Redneck Manifesto explores the socioeconomic history of low-income Americans. According to Goad, rednecks are traditionally pro-labor and anti-establishment and have an anti-hierarchical religious orientation. Goad argues that elites manipulate low-income people (blacks and whites especially) through classism and racism to keep them in conflict with each other and distracted from their exploitation by elites.
Modern usage
Redneck, like nigger, has two general uses: first, as a pejorative for outsiders, and, second, as a term used by members within that group. To outsiders, it is generally a term for those of Southern or Appalachian rural poor backgrounds — or more loosely, rural poor to working-class people of rural extraction. (Appalachia also includes large parts of Pennsylvania, New York and other states.) Within that group, however, it is used to describe the more downscale members. Rednecks span from the poor to the working class.
As noted earlier, usage of the term redneck differs from ''hick'' and [[hillbilly], because rednecks reject or resist assimilation to the dominant culture, while hicks and hillbillies are isolated from it. In this way, the redneck is similar to the cracker.
Generally, there is a continuum from redneck (a derisive term) to the country person; yet there are differences. Rednecks typically are more libertine, especially in their personal lives, than their country brethren who tend towards social conservatism. Also, the lowest-class rednecks especially have a penchant for the obscene or outrageous (see Stereotype below).
In contrast to country people, rednecks tend not to attend church, or do so infrequently. They also tend to use alcohol and gamble more than their church-going neighbors. Further, "politically apathetic" well describes this group. The younger ones generally don't vote. If they do vote, while they tend toward populism and the Democratic party, they are less homogenous than the country people and other Southern whites. Many Southern celebrities like Jeff Foxworthy and the late Jerry Clower embrace the redneck label. It is used both as a term of pride and as a derogatory epithet, sometimes to paint country people and/or their lifestyle as being lower class.
Writer Edward Abbey, as well as the original Earth First! under Dave Foreman (before that group was taken over by urban leftists around 1990), proudly adopted the term redneck to describe themselves. This reflected the words possible historical origin among striking coal miners to describe white rural working-class radicalism. "In Defense of the Redneck" was a popular essay by Ed Abbey. One popular early Earth First! bumper sticker was "Rednecks for Wilderness." Murray Bookchin, an urban leftist and social ecologist, objected strongly to Earth First!'s use of the term as having racist overtones and used this as part of his broader attack on deep ecology, possibly reflecting pro-urban and anti-white working class, anti-rural biases.
The recent prosperity of the New South changed the social status of the redneck. The 20th century ideas of Southern upward mobility, which required dropping or modifying a regional accent and joining the mainstream, was considered the norm for the region. (Exceptions were made for politicians and college football coaches, for whom a drawl was still required for regional credibility.) Newfound prosperity allowed rednecks to cling to their old ways and reject the status quo of modernity. In the 1990s, when Jeff Foxworthy drawled "you might be a redneck …" he wasn't just needling folks who had ever "fought over an inner tube." In one of his stand-up routines, Foxworthy summed up the condition as "a glorious absence of sophistication." According to Slate columnist Bryan Curtis, "Foxworthy was also preaching to the newly minted white middle class, those who had ditched the pickup for an Audi and their ancestral segregation for affirmative action." According to University of Georgia professor James C. Cobb, "Now, feeling relatively secure and closer to the mainstream, they rebel against acting respectable, embracing this counterculture hero—the 'redneck' who is what he is, and doesn't give a damn what anybody thinks." [2]
U.S. Representative Charles B. Rangel caused controversy on February 13, 2005, by blasting Bill Clinton as a redneck in response to Hillary Clinton's refusal to support his views on the Amadou Diallo case. [3]
Stereotypes
While some cultural elites tend to use the term redneck as a classification of specific Southern whites, it is generally perceived as being a stereotypic and derogatory term among Southern whites in general. It is generally used to imply inbreeding, uncleanliness, poor dental hygiene, etc. The term's use by outsiders is, therefore, generally viewed negatively and amounts to overt racism in the minds of many.
The stereotypical redneck may live in a mobile home or old weatherbeaten farm house in a rural area, and drive an old, large, beat-up pickup truck or a '60s or '70s muscle car, possibly adorned with the Confederate Battle Flag, with a gun rack in the rear window. He may possibly drive a tractor to do jobs such as cutting and bailing hay and harvesting crops, but he might also use it for pure entertainment. His clothing consists of a "wifebeater" (a white sleeveless undershirt), or a farmer t-shirt. He also wears blue jeans, a baseball or trucker hat. The jeans of redneck men often have a permanent circle on the back-pocket from carrying a can of dipping tobacco, such as Skoal or Copenhagen. Their hair is often worn in the mullet style, or in a military-style haircut. They are also prone to swearing, perhaps not as much as the stereotypical Yankee, but more than other Southerners, Mountaineers, or Appalachians.
A redneck is stereotypically imagined as consuming mass-produced American beer such as Budweiser or Miller by the case. Other beverages might include Moonshine, Pabst Blue Ribbon and Jack Daniel's whiskey.
Stereotypical hobbies include hunting, fishing, riding four-wheelers and snowmobiles, and watching professional wrestling, stock car racing, demolition derbies, tractor pulls and monster truck rallies. Rednecks are characteristically fond of repairing car engines and collecting junked cars on their lawns.
Stereotypically, rednecks are often assumed to enjoy country music and Southern rock bands such as Lynyrd Skynyrd, the Allman Brothers, George Thorogood and ZZ Top. Redneck men are sometimes assumed to listen to Hard Rock and Metal such as Ted Nugent, Alice In Chains, Pantera, AC/DC, Led Zeppelin, David Lee Roth era Van Halen, Deep Purple, Black Sabbath, Ratt, Motörhead, Bad Company, and Guns N' Roses.
Redneck women are sometimes portrayed as sexually promiscuous as the urban stereotype. Daisy Dukes is a name for the extremely small shorts worn by the character Daisy Duke on the television program (and 2005 film) 'The Dukes of Hazzard.
Rednecks are often broad-brushed as lacking education or being ignorant.
Popular culture
The Grand Ole Opry and Hee Haw are popular entertainments from years past, and they, as well as the entertainers Hank Williams, Grandpa Jones and Jerry Clower, have seen lasting popularity within the redneck community, as well as forging opinions in the minds of those on the outside.
Since the dawn of the radio age, entertainers have traded on the redneck stereotype for humor and as a means to bond with their audiences. Stars like Minnie Pearl used homespun comedy as much as music to create a lasting persona, and sophisticated and intelligent musicians like Earl Scruggs and Lester Flatt appeared on shows such as The Beverly Hillbillies, lending credence to broad humor about uncomplicated rural Americans. Some musicians who toured the South in tailored suits were put on stage in overalls surrounded by hay bales when they appeared on the television show Hee-Haw.
According to James C. Cobb, a history professor at the University of Georgia, the redneck comedian "provided a rallying point for bourgeois and lower-class whites alike. With his front-porch humor and politically outrageous bons mots, the redneck comedian created an illusion of white equality across classes." [4]
Johnny Russell was nominated for a Grammy Award in 1973 for his recording of Rednecks, White Socks, and Blue Ribbon Beer, parlaying the "common touch" into financial and critical success. Country and Western music singer Gretchen Wilson titled one of her songs Redneck Woman on her 2004 album, Here for the Party. Wilson was born and brought up in Illinois.
In recent years, the comedic stylings of Jeff Foxworthy, Ron White, Bill Engvall, Larry the Cable Guy, and Roy D. Mercer have become popular, with the first four forming first a "Blue Collar Comedy Tour", and now a Blue Collar TV television show and film. Foxworthy's definition of redneck is "a glorious absence of sophistication."
King of the Hill is a contemporary American animated sitcom showing a modern suburban family in Arlen, Texas. In the show, they are sometimes derisively called "redneck" and "hillbilly" by an Laotian neighbor who speaks broken English.
Rednex is a Swedish band that had an international novelty hit with the song Cotton-Eye Joe in 1995. It has released other songs as well with a redneck theme.
The Urban Rednecks is a piano indie/rock/alternative band from Indianapolis, Indiana. The name is a bit of a misnomer as the performers do not play music of urban or redneck derivation. The band's lead singer, Andrew Riesmeyer, credits the band's name to the culture produced by the interest in the Indianapolis 500 motorcar race in traditionally rural midwestern America.
Redneck Rampage, a mid-90s video game, placed the player in the role of a redneck, killing and maiming various animal and human enemies.
Extraterritorial conclaves
There are also several areas where large groups of rednecks live outside of their normal ranges. One is Bakersfield, California and the surrounding area, which experienced mass migration by Arkansans (Arkies) and Oklahomans (Okies) during the Great Depression and Dust Bowl era of the 1930s, by people seeking to leave poverty and crop failures behind them.
In the 1950s, Bakersfield country musicians such as Buck Owens, Merle Haggard and Wynn Stewart helped develop a unique country music style called the Bakersfield sound. Their influence was so great that Bakersfield is second only to Nashville, Tennessee, in country music fame. Bakersfield continues to produce and influence famous country music artists.
Central Pennsylvania is often seen as redneck country, as in Democratic Party strategist James Carville's reputed description of the state: "Philadelphia at one end, Pittsburgh at the other, Alabama in the middle."
Other extraterritorial conclaves can be found throughout the oil-producing areas of Alaska. In the second half of the 20th-Century, concurrent with the development of the oil industry and pipeline, large numbers of Gulf Coast petroleum workers moved to Alaska for high pay and adventure — and many stayed.
Alberta is sometimes said to be the home of rednecks in Canada, due to its similarities to Texas (oil, ranching, and cowboys).
This phenomenon is not unique. Yankees also have extraterritorial enclaves in areas such as South Florida, Cobb County, Georgia, and Cary, North Carolina.
Related terms
Australia
The term bogan is used in Australia to describe individuals of Anglo-Celtic heritage living in rural or poor suburban regions.
Barbados
"Poor whites" in Barbados (descendants largely of seventeenth century English, Scottish, and Irish indentured servants and deportees) were called "red legs." Many of these families moved to Virginia and the Carolinas as large sugar plantations replaced small tobacco farming in the Caribbean.
Brazil
The term caipira is used to define inhabitants from the countryside of southeastern Brazilian states (chiefly rural) and descendants of Japanese, Portuguese and Italian immigrants); they are considered the Brazilian counterparts of American rednecks. Depending of how the word is applied, it can acquire pejorative connotations, the strongest of them being to intentionally pronounce the word capiau (kah-pee-ow) as "kah-pee-arr," as a caipira supposedly would do. Another slur is to refer to one as a "Jeca" (zhe-kah), from the fictional character Jeca Tatu created by Brazilian writer Monteiro Lobato.
Chile
The term huaso describes people who work or live in the rural sectors of the country. They are described as wearing a poncho, straw hat and cowboy boots.
North America
The term farmer tan is sometimes used to refer to a sunburn, particularly when the sunburned area covers the neck and arms of the person only. This can also refer to a suntan covering the same area.
"White cracker" or simply "cracker" was originally a pejorative term for a white person, mainly used in the Southern United States, and still is in many instances. It has also, however, increasingly been used as a proud (or self-deprecating) term by some Southern whites —or American whites in general—in reference to themselves.
The term goat roper is sometimes used as a term of derision for unsophisticated rural people in the Southwestern United States, Arkansas and Louisiana. It alludes to the belief that a person who raises or "ropes" goats is inferior to a cowboy or cattle rancher. This term may have roots in the range wars between ranchers and sheep or goat ranchers in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. [5] [6]
The term peckerwood, an inversion of woodpecker, is also used, but usually only with negative connotations. It was coined in the 19th century by Southern blacks to describe poor whites. They considered them loud and troublesome like the bird, often with red hair like the woodpecker's head plumes. This word is still widely used by Southern blacks to refer to Southern whites.
In Canada, redneck is used in much the same way as it is in the United States. It is mostly used for people from the Prairie provinces and rural areas in British Columbia and Ontario.
The term blueneck is a recently coined corollary of redneck. Its meaning can vary significantly based on usage. It can refer to a "cold-weather redneck" from Canada, Alaska, or other cold areas of North America[7] [8]. It can also be used to signify a "leftist redneck." [9]
Swamp Yankee is a term used by urban Yankees to describe rural New Englanders.
South Africa
In South Africa, the Afrikaans term rooinek (meaning redneck) was derisively applied by Afrikaners to the British soldiers who fought during the Boer Wars, because their skin was sensitive to the harsh African sun. The phrase is still used by Afrikaners to describe English-speaking white people.
United Kingdom
Some people in Britain compare the rural inhabitants of Southwest England to America's rednecks, as both groups of people are subject to negative stereotyping.
See also
- Classism
- Folk culture
- Good ol' boy
- Good ol' boy network
- Hick
- Hillbilly
- List of ethnic slurs
- The Redneck Manifesto
- Redneck Rampage
- Redneck Riviera
- Whiskey Rebellion
Sources
- The Redneck Hero in the Postmodern World by Ruth D. Weston, South Carolina Review - Spring 1993
- Encyclopedia of Southern Culture, ed. by Charles R Wilson and William Ferris, 1989
- In Defense of the Redneck by Ed Abbey, University of Arizona Press, 1979
External links
- Poor Whites — The Georgia Encyclopedia (history)