Abstract
This article responds to Walls and Billings’s call for a study of work in an Appalachian cultural context through a close qualitative examination of the experiences of White, working-class men. As such, intersectionality theory along with Marx’s theory of alienation guides the analysis. The article begins with a self-reflection that reveals the rationale and experience of the author’s return “home” to do scholarship in the complex setting within which he was raised, yet struggles to belong. Implications of this experience for the research are explored.
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