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Hillbilly

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Hillbilly is an often aFUCK YOUhillbillies are merely isolated from the dominant culture. Because of its strongly stereotypical connotations, the term is frequently considered derogatory depending on the context in which it is used or the attitude of the user.

History

The term "Hill-Billies" is first encountered in documents from 17th century Ireland. Roman Catholic King James II landed at Kinsale in Ireland in 1689 and began to raise a Catholic army in an attempt to regain the British throne. Protestant King William III, Prince of Orange, led an English counter force into Ireland and defeated James II at the Battle of the Boyne in 1690. A significant portion of William III's army was composed of Protestants of Scottish descent (Planters) who had settled in Ulster in northern Ireland. The southern Irish Catholic supporters of James II referred to these northern Protestant supporters of King William as "Hill-Billies"Vorlage:Fact and "Billy Boys"--Billy being an abbreviation of William; the term "Billy Boy" is still used today, mainly in Northern Ireland. The Catholics and Protestants were at war and the terms were not spoken in kindness. Supporters of King William more generally came to be known as Orangemen.

It is believed that the term "hillbilly" in the United States was conferred during the early 18th Century by the occupying British soldiers as a carry over from the Irish term, in referring to Scotch-Irish immigrants of mainly Presbyterian origin, dwelling in the frontier areas of the Appalachian MountainsVorlage:Fact. These Protestant Irish colonists brought their cultural traditions with them when they immigrated. Many of their stories, songs and ballads dealt with the history of their Ulster and Lowland Scot homelands, especially relating the tale of the Protestant King William III, Prince of Orange.

Alternatively, it is also speculated that the term emerged as a derogatory nickname given by the coastal plain dwelling Anglo-Saxon Southerners for the hill-dwelling settlers of Eastern Tennessee, Western Virginia, northern Arkansas and Eastern Kentucky, many of whom were ambivalent to the Confederacy during the American Civil WarVorlage:Fact. Billy Yank was the common term for Union soldiers, the nemesis of the Confederate Johnny Reb.

Even another explanation for the term comes from the European immigrants to the United States that settled in the Appalachian Mountains. Many of these immigrants were from a Germanic origin and were named William, a common Germanic name during that time. Those William's, who went by Bill or Billy, living in the Appalachian Mountains became known as Hillbillies. Basically, Bills who lived in the hills.

The use of the word was probably most apt (and relatively inoffensive) during the period between the western expansion of the early-to-mid nineteenth century and the post-war period of the 1940s. The advent of the interstate highway system and television brought many previously isolated communities into mainstream United States culture in the 1950s and 1960s. The Internet continues this integration but many communities with relatively traditional lifestyles remain throughout the region. Strangely enough, early editions of Websters Dictionary include a definition of hillbilly as "a Michigan Farmer".

Historically, there were conflicts between the mountain-dwelling "hillbillies" and the planters who lived on the coastal plains. During the American Civil War, many residents of western Virginia were pro-Union in that they generally did not own slaves and resented the political dominance of planters who did. This resentment was a contributing factor to the creation of the state of West Virginia. This affiliation may also be observed in the pro-Union names of many rural Appalachian areas, e.g. Lincoln County or Union County.

Country music was originally called "hillbilly music," even by its fans, until the 1950s. Now, the older name is deemed offensive (and inappropriate) and is hardly ever used. However, the term "Hillbilly music" is now sometimes used to describe Old-time music. An early tune that contained the word "hillbilly" was "Hillbilly Boogie" by the Delmore Brothers in 1946. Much earlier, in the 1920s, there were records by a band called the Beverly Hillbillies. In 1927, the Gennett studios in Richmond, Indiana, made a recording of black fiddler Jim Booker with other instrumentalists; their recordings were labeled "made for Hillbilly" in the Gennett files, and were marketed to a white audience. Also during the 1920s, an old-time music band known as the Hill Billies featuring Al Hopkins and Fiddlin' Charlie Bowman, achieved acclaim as recording artists for Columbia Records. By the late forties, radio stations broadcast music described as "hillbilly", originally to describe fiddlers and string bands, but was then used to describe the traditional music of the people of the Appalachian Mountains. The people who actually sang these songs and lived in the Appalachian Mountains never used these terms to describe their own music. Popular songs whose style bore characteristics of both "hillbilly" and African American music was referred to, in the late 1940s and early 1950s as hillbilly boogie, and in the mid-1950s as "rockabilly". Elvis Presley was a prominent member of the latter genre. When the Country Music Association was founded in 1958, the term "hillbilly music" gradually fell out of use. However, the term "rockabilly" is alive and well. [1]. Later, the musical genre "Country," formerly known as hillbilly, was merged with the genre "Western," formerly knows as Western Swing, and the result was the current category C&W, Country and Western. The two should not be confused, as Country is centered in Nashville, and Western is represented by Austin, Texas.

The famous bluegrass fiddler Vassar Clements described his style of music "hillbilly jazz".

In Poland a hillbilly was reference to the people who live in the mountainous south of Poland in the part once occupied by the Austro-Hungarian Empire.

The hillbilly stereotype

Vorlage:Unreferenced Stereotypical characteristics of hillbillies as portrayed in popular media, such as Li'l Abner, are that they:

  • Smoke a corncob pipe
  • Are often moonshiners with an illegal still on their property
  • Often drink from traditional moonshine clay jugs marked "XXX"
  • Often wear a worn out floppy hat
  • Own a shotgun and are potentially violent towards those who encroach upon their property (although not restricted just to the property)
  • Often fight each other along family lines. This is known as a "feud." A historically important fight between hillbilly clans was the Hatfield-McCoy feud.
  • Are often barefoot
  • Have poor personal and dental hygiene (sometimes portrayed with few or no teeth at all).
  • Are not motivated by money or attempt in any way to improve their social status in comparison to the outside world, but are content with their lives
  • Do not generally leave their clans to see other parts of the world
  • Are poorly educated
  • Play the banjo, mandolin, dobro, autoharp, Jew's harp, harmonica, washboard, or "bass", rigged of a mop handle, clothesline and inverted zinc washtub.
  • Hunt and eat what others might consider vermin or non-food animals, such as squirrel, rattlesnake, and opossum.
  • Make and use many homemade, or semi-clandestine folk remedies, including a wide range of herbal preparations-- including sassafras, American ginseng, marijuana, etc.
  • Drive vintage pick-up trucks, or even have several defunct vehicles rusting on their property for no apparent reason
  • Wear overalls, with no shirt underneath
  • The men often have long, scraggly, and unkempt beards (see Mountain man)
  • Inbred and incestuous
  • Have innapropriate sexual relations outside their species
  • Have two first-names, i.e. Bobby-Sue, Billy-Joe
  • Are often old-fashioned in political and social views
  • Attend barn dances
  • Women wear short jeans and a button shirt tied above the midrift
  • Be crazy or cruel when elderly

Modern usage

Hillbilly Hot Dogs, a roadside hot dog stand located near Huntington, West Virginia.

Today, in urban areas, "hillbilly" has increasingly insulting connotations--especially as rural people are increasingly marginalized.

To the people of the Appalachian Mountains, the term "hillbilly" is complex. It can be both embraced as a reference to heritage and hegemonic resistance, and/or seen to carry a negative connotation that has been greatly emphasized by how Hollywood movies and films portray the "hillbilly" as impoverished, ill-educated, toothless, shoeless, unstylish, inbred, etc. While such stereotyping is generally offensive, socio-economic realities have left much of the Appalachian region impoverished, although the economy has been steadily improving since the 1990s.

Since the mid 1970s the Appalachian town of Pikeville, Kentucky has been home to the annual Hillbilly Days Festival. The large festival, which raises money for the Shriner's Hospitals for Children, pokes fun at the local Hillbilly stereotype and celebrates Appalachian culture and art. The festival is the second largest festival in the state of Kentucky, often drawing nearly 100,000 people.

A Hillbilly Days festival also takes place every Father's Day weekend in Bennett Spring State Park near Lebanon, Missouri. Events include an arts and craft show, activities for children and various contests such as apple peeling and skillet throwing.


In fiction

Hillbillies have often been characterized as naïve or ignorant hicks.

  • The hillbilly lifestyle of the Ozarks was gently parodied in the comic strip Li'l Abner, which inspired a Broadway musical and movie by the same name.
  • Ma and Pa Kettle were very popular characters in comedic movies of the 1940s and 1950s.
  • Hard Haid Moe in Disney's comics
  • In the 1960s American sitcom The Beverly Hillbillies, the Clampett family were supposed to have come from the hills near a fictionalized hamlet in Arkansas hamlet known as Bugtussle. While Granny was from "across the river" in Tennessee, Jed and his family were from Arkansas as noted to the references of Tulsa and Joplin being close by.
  • Festus, a prominent character on the TV series Gunsmoke, belonged to a hillbilly clan.
  • An episode of The Dukes of Hazzard saw Bo and Luke rescuing Daisy from being forced to marry into a family of sociopathic hillbillies.
  • A recurring character on The Simpsons, Cletus Spuckler (aka the "Slack-Jawed Yokel") and his family are stereotypical hillbillies.
  • In the WWF, a character known as Hillbilly Jim was made to portray a large man with a huge beard and wearing overalls back in the 1980s as a frequent tag team partner of Hulk Hogan.
  • Fuzzy Lumpkins is one of the villains from the Powerpuff Girls that's a hillbilly.
  • The 1960s American sitcom The Andy Griffith Show has two contrasting stereotypes of recurring hillbilly characters: The ignorant but kindly, impoverished but generous Darling family, portrayed by bluegrass band The Dillards and Denver Pyle; and the belligerent, paranoid, frankly violent buffoon, Ernest T. Bass, portrayed by Howard Morris.
  • In 1970, the author James Dickey published the novel Deliverance, a story about four men going for a canoe-trip on a river in the mountains of Georgia. They encounter several sociopathic hillbillies and are subsequently attacked, captured, tortured, and raped by them. (Based on a real canoe trip in which he was actually helped by friendly mountaineers.)
  • On Nickelodeon's The Amanda Show, starring Amanda Bynes, a recurring skit titled "Hillbilly Moment" would be featured. Amanda Bynes and Drake Bell would appear as stereotypical hillbillies and behave accordingly.
  • A popular television comedy-variety show "Hee Haw" starred several well-known country singers and regularly lampooned the stereotypical hillybilly lifestyle.
  • Rob Zombie's 1998 album, Hellbilly Deluxe, Hellbilly is a direct derivative of Hillbilly.
  • In the popular late-night comedy show Saturday Night Live, hillbillies are portrayed in the skit Appalachian Emergency Room, with injuries only associable with the common media representation of hillbillies.
  • The Arkansas Chuggabug, driven by Luke & Blubber Bear - hillbillies in a wooden buggy driven by a coal-fired range in Wacky Races is an American animated television series from Hanna-Barbera Productions.
  • The Adult Swim show, Squidbillies, focuses on a family of hillbilly/redneck squids and their stereotypical misadventures.
  • In the 2006 Disney/Pixar hit film, Cars and the video game of the same name , there is hillbilly tow-truck driver named Mater.
  • In the Nickelodeon animated show Avatar: The Last Airbender, the episode "The Swamp" features a tribe of swamp-dwelling waterbenders which speak and behave like stereotypical hillbillies.

See also

References

  • Hillbilly, A Cultural History of an American Icon, by Anthony Harkins
  • Hillbillyland: What the Movies Did to the Mountains & What the Mountains Did to the Movies, by J.W. Williamson