Jared M. Phillips holds a doctorate in American history and is assistant professor of international studies at the University of Arkansas. He lives and works on a small farm outside of Prairie Grove, Arkansas.
"Hipbillies boldly challenges common stereotypes of the back to the
landers who relocated to the Ozarks in the 1970s as clueless,
deadbeat dropouts who never fit in with their local neighbors and
failed miserably to establish sustainable communities and live
'naturally.' Instead, Jared Phillips persuasively argues that the
back to the landers arrived with serious commitments to their
ideals and, despite their setbacks and struggles, ultimately left
their mark on the region's arts and crafts communities, solar
energy advancements, organic farming and farmers' markets,
environmental activism, and other legacies that can be seen in the
Ozarks today. This is a fascinating read and an important
contribution to recent Ozarks history."
--Blake Perkins, author of Hillbilly Hellraisers: Federal Power and
Populist Defiance in the Ozarks
"Jared Phillips has tackled an understudied, fascinating subject
with depth and precision, providing insight into the Ozarks' back
to the land movement that has heretofore not been revealed. A fun
ride into the history of the counterculture movement in the heart
of the backwoods."
--Brian C. Campbell, Berry College, writer and producer of The
Natural State of America
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