“A fascinating read on a subject of vital historical importance—and one that has much to say about our contemporary political difficulties. It weaves together the story of rising regional consciousness in the Appalachians with the rising anti-urbanism of the 1960s. I know of no other work that so successfully places back-to-the-landers of this generation within the context of broad mainstream social."
—Dona Brown, author of Back to the Land: The Enduring Dream of Self-Sufficiency in Modern Americacurrents.”
“In the 1980’s, a strip-mining company was about to start destroying Lincoln County, West Virginia –starting smack in the middle of several dozen small farms owned by back-to-the- land newcomers who had settled there in the 1970’s. Nothing was able to stop that corporate steamroller until the newcomers and some local allies re-invented what Jinny Turman shows was a re-invention of America’s grassroots ‘civic republicanism,’ dormant since the populist collapse after 1896. With The New Decentralists, the re-thinking of Appalachian history receives a bracing shot in the arm.”
—Paul Salstrom, professor emeritus of history at St. Mary-of-the-Woods College in Indiana
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