Hostname: page-component-89b8bd64d-mmrw7 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2026-05-12T15:14:02.482Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

RUIN’S PROGENY

Race, Environment, and Appalachia’s Coal Camp Blacks

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  26 October 2016

Karida L. Brown*
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles
Michael W. Murphy
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, Brown University
Apollonya M. Porcelli
Affiliation:
Department of Sociology, Brown University
*
* Corresponding author: Karida L. Brown, Department of Sociology, University of California, Los Angeles; 264 Haines Hall, 375 Portola Plaza, Los Angeles, CA 90095-1511, USA. E-Mail: kbrown@soc.ucla.edu
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

Extractive industries have long been a topic of study in environmental social science. These studies have focused on how extractive industries, as linked to global capitalism, degrade local communities and their environments, but have failed to consider their racialized effects. At the same time, when scholars have examined the intersection of race and the environment, their analyses tend towards the quantification and mapping of the disproportionate environmental burdens that weigh upon communities of color. Both literatures neglect to examine the intersection of race and the environment from a phenomenological perspective. Our research intervenes in the literature by asking: (1) How is the environment implicated in conditioning racialized subjectivities? And (2) How do landscapes and environment impact the formation of collective identity and sense of belonging for African Americans? In this article, we focus on the lived experience of a generation of Black coal miners and their families, who migrated throughout the central Appalachian region during the twentieth century Great Migration. This study offers an empirical investigation into the “landscapes of meaning” that can emerge from the experience of racialized displacement from land and environment. Further, in documenting the lived experience of this group of African Americans, this study also counters the otherwise dominant narrative that portrays Appalachian people as hopeless, helpless, and homeless; and White. Data for this study are drawn from the EKAAMP collection, a community-driven participatory archive aimed at documenting the lives of African American coal miners and their families. This work offers three contributions: It (1) reinserts agency into the analysis of communities affected by extractive economies; (2) invigorates the productive tensions that underlie considerations of the inextricable linkages between environment and the phenomenological experience of racialization; and (3) reconsiders the long-standing historical intersections between environment, community, and race.

Information

Type
Race and Environmental Equity
Copyright
Copyright © Hutchins Center for African and African American Research 2016 
Figure 0

Fig. 1. Map of Appalachia.

Figure 1

Fig. 2. Photograph of Lynch, KY (established in 1917) in Aug. 1919.Archival photos provided with permission by Southeast Kentucky Community and Technical College and the Appalachian Archives. These photos are part of the U.S. Coal & Coke and International Harvester Image Collection.

Figure 2

Fig. 3. Photograph of a home abutting the mountainside in Harlan County, KY.Archival photos provided with permission by Southeast Kentucky Community and Technical College and the Appalachian Archives. These photos are part of the U.S. Coal & Coke and International Harvester Image Collection.

Figure 3

Fig. 4. Miner loading coal in the portal #31 mine in Lynch, KY. Circa. 1920.Archival photos provided with permission by Southeast Kentucky Community and Technical College and the Appalachian Archives. These photos are part of the U.S. Coal & Coke and International Harvester Image Collection.