Description: An ethnography and oral history of miners and their families in Kentucky focusing on political ideology and working class consciousness
Brief description: Shaunna L. Scott is Assistant Professor of Sociology and an Associate of The Appalachian Center at the University of Kentucky.
Review Quotes:
"This is passionate, exciting fieldwork. Scott has produced a very readable and interesting account of the consciousness of ordinary people in Harlan County in the 1980s. This story of the miner's movement is fascinating." - John Bodnar, Indiana University
"Scott's case studies illustrate the diversity of life in a manner which is enlightening and entertaining. She combines information about unionization, strikes and work with other facts of life particularly the family, the church and the role of women. This creative approach allows her to reinforce her thesis about diversity, complexity and dialectics which accords class the primary focus but leaves room for other factors, particularly gender." - Irwin M. Marcus, Indiana University of Pennsylvania