Ramp Hollow Spiral-Bound | 2018-11-20

Steven Stoll

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How the United States underdeveloped Appalachia

Appalachia--among the most storied and yet least understood regions in America--has long been associated with poverty and backwardness. But how did this image arise and what exactly does it mean? In Ramp Hollow, Steven Stoll launches an original investigation into the history of Appalachia and its place in U.S. history, with a special emphasis on how generations of its inhabitants lived, worked, survived, and depended on natural resources held in common.

Ramp Hollow
traces the rise of the Appalachian homestead and how its self-sufficiency resisted dependence on money and the industrial society arising elsewhere in the United States--until, beginning in the nineteenth century, extractive industries kicked off a "scramble for Appalachia" that left struggling homesteaders dispossessed of their land. As the men disappeared into coal mines and timber camps, and their families moved into shantytowns or deeper into the mountains, the commons of Appalachia were, in effect, enclosed, and the fate of the region was sealed.

Ramp Hollow
takes a provocative look at Appalachia, and the workings of dispossession around the world, by upending our notions about progress and development. Stoll ranges widely from literature to history to economics in order to expose a devastating process whose repercussions we still feel today.

Publisher: Macmillan
Original Binding: Trade Paperback
Pages: 432 pages
ISBN-10: 0809080192
Item Weight: 0.9 lbs
Dimensions: 5.4 x 1.2 x 8.3 inches
"A deep and moving chronicle of dispossession. Steven Stoll's book manages, like no other account I have seen, to combine a subtle understanding of Appalachian subsistence practices with a global understanding of the importance of the commons. Erudite, conceptually powerful, and deeply sympathetic. Winstanley's rage against the theft of the commons was never so magnificently documented and understood as in Ramp Hollow. An instant classic of agrarian history." --James Scott, Sterling Professor of Political Science and Anthropology at Yale University

Steven Stoll is a professor of history at Fordham University and the author of The Great Delusion (Hill and Wang, 2008) and Larding the Lean Earth (Hill and Wang, 2002). His writing has appeared in Harper's Magazine, Lapham's Quarterly, and the New Haven Review.