southern migrants
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2021 ◽  
Vol 63 (3-4) ◽  
pp. 464-481
Author(s):  
James Krapfl ◽  
Sarah Cameron ◽  
Adeeb Khalid ◽  
Denis Kozlov ◽  
Jeff Sahadeo
Keyword(s):  

2021 ◽  
Vol 17 (48) ◽  
pp. 227-238
Author(s):  
Alexey Golubev

The new book by the Canadian scholar Jeff Sahadeo is a historical anthropology of the migration from the southern regions of the USSR to Moscow and Leningrad during late socialism. Based on a large collection of oral history interviews with former migrants as well as on archival and newspaper sources, this book compares the historical experience of migration in the USSR with similar processes in North America and Western Europe. The migrant stories presented in the book reveal the complexity of the late-Soviet historical experience that can hardly be reduced to the concept of “stagnation.”


2020 ◽  
Vol 32 (2) ◽  
pp. 95-111
Author(s):  
Jesse Montgomery

This paper examines the role of country music in the political life of the Young Patriots, a radical leftist group composed of white southern migrants to Chicago that allied with the Black Panther Party during the 1960s and 1970s. It begins by taking up scholarly accounts of the Republican Party's strategic embrace of country music during the era before examining the ways in which the Young Patriots used country music as a tool to organize in their local community. It argues that by grounding their analysis of country in the political economy of their neighborhood of Uptown Chicago, and institutions particular to migrant enclaves—especially the urban “hillbilly bar”—the Young Patriots offered an interpretation of country's politics that runs counter to the racialized business logic that governed Music Row and White House as well as more contemporary narratives about country music's essential political intransigence. Finally, it offers provisional thoughts on how this case study illustrates a fundamental challenge for political progressives invested in country music: how to organize the complexity of a genre whose politics were—like the politics of the working-class—often divided against itself and expressed in deeply contradictory ways with regards to central political issues like race, gender, and the nation, and what it means to put those organized politics to work.


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