J. Blake Perkins, a native of the Arkansas Ozarks, is an assistant professor of history at Williams Baptist College.
"Hillbilly Hellraisers challenges the seemingly uncontroversial
claim that antigovernment sentiment has enjoyed exception
continuity among rural working-class Americans." --Journal of
Appalachian Studies "This is a very good book about the roots of
resistance and rebellion in the Arkansas Ozarks in response to
federal government attempts to effect social and economic change in
the region from the late 19th to the early 21st century. . . .
Highly recommended."--OzarksWatch "Hillbilly Hellraisers represents
an important contribution to rural history and a valuable narrative
of those who struggled to confront the changes that reshaped the
region. It's strongest moments derive from the individual stories
of those who sought to hold on to their farms and their traditional
modes of living."--Arkansas Review
"Perkins produces an engaging political history of the
communities in the Ozark Mountain region of northwest Arkansas. . .
. While steeped in local history, this book also provides insights
into how rural people react to federalism. . . . Highly
recommended."--Choice "This is an important book, one that fills a
much-needed historiographic niche, and one that opens the door for
further study into the political culture of not only the Arkansas
Ozarks, but rural America as a whole."--Elder Mountain: Journal of
Ozark Studies "Perkins should earn applause for his spirited, well
researched, provocative study." --Criminal Law and Criminal Justice
Book Reviews "Hillbilly Hellraisers would benefit anyone interested
in the roots of US rural poverty and our contemporary politics of
division." --Missouri Historical Review "Perkins has written a
smart, provocative, and important book." --Journal of the Gilded
Age & Progressive Era
"Perkins writes with verve, humor, and minimal jargon, focusing
tightly on his thesis. This insightful addition to the University
of Illinois Press's Working Class in American History series makes
a welcome contribution to local and regional history." --The
Journal of American History
"Put Hillbilly Hellraisers on your bookshelf, next to other works
about rural radicalism and conservatism." --American Historical
Review
"Perkins has meticulously researched the development of populism
and the resulting defiance of the yeomanry of the Arkansas Ozarks.
. . . By avoiding generalities, the author breaks through easy
stereotypes to arrive at the specific circumstances that led to the
development of the conservative Ozarker mindset." --Kansas
History
"In an age of deepening political and cultural divisions between
the rural and urban sections of the United States, studies that
seek to explain the source of rural conservative anti-elite and
antigovernment politics are needed more than ever. Perkin's
contribution definitely advances our understanding of this
phenomenon." --Labor
"Hillbilly Hellraisers is an important study because it sheds light
on the failures of rural reforms that bred discontent. Perkins's
detailed investigations uncover highly localized power dynamics,
while his century-long scope reveals the broader evolution of
resistance to federal power." --Rural History
"Hillbilly Hellraisers is a stunningly original work that manages
to clarify the actions of a misunderstood people at the same time
that it reasserts complexity into their allegedly simple lives.
Blake Perkins reminds us that regional stories have national, even
universal, significance, but to truly appreciate that significance
we have to first approach the stories of Ozarkers and other
regional groups on their own terms and on their own turf. A
must-read for anyone studying the Upland South and for those
seeking a fuller understanding of the changing nature of
antigovernment protest."--Brooks Blevins, author of Ghost of the
Ozarks: Murder and Memory in the Upland South
"Using the Arkansas Ozarks as a case study, J. Blake Perkins sheds
new light on the rise of antigovernment conservatism in rural
America during the twentieth century. Well written and thoroughly
researched, his book is a welcome addition to the study of modern
politics."--Bruce E. Stewart, author of Blood in the Hills: A
History of Violence in Appalachia
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