Our roots run deep as ironweed : Appalachian women and the fight for environmental justice / Shannon Elizabeth Bell.
2013
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Details
Author
Title
Our roots run deep as ironweed : Appalachian women and the fight for environmental justice / Shannon Elizabeth Bell.
Imprint
Urbana, Chicago, and Springfield : University of Illinois Press, [2013]
Copyright
©2013.
Description
1 online resource (225 pages) : illustrations
Formatted Contents Note
Acknowledgments
List of figures
Introduction
How can they expect me as a mother to look over that? : Maria Gunnoe's fight for her children's health and safety
We became two determined women : Pauline Canterberry and Mary Miller become the sylvester dustbusters
Let us live in our mountains : Joan Linville's fight for her homeland
You gotta go and do everything you can
fight for your kids : Donetta Blankenship speaks out against underground slurry injections
It's just a part of who I am : Maria Lambert and the movement for clean water in Prenter
I'm not an activist against coal, I'm an activist for the preservation of my state : Teri Blanton and the fight for justice in Kentucky
I'm not going to be run out, I'm not going to be run over, I'm not going out without a fight : Patty Sebok's battle against monster coal trucks
Our roots run so deep, you can't distinguish us from the earth we live on : Debbie Jarrell and the campaign to move Marsh Fork elementary school
It's not just what I choose to do, it's also, I think, what I have to do : Lorelei Scarboro's drive to save coal river mountain
Money cannot recreate what nature gives you : Donna Branham's struggle against mountaintop removal
I want my great-great-grandchildren to be able to live on this earth! : the legacy of the courageous Julia "Judy" bonds
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index.
List of figures
Introduction
How can they expect me as a mother to look over that? : Maria Gunnoe's fight for her children's health and safety
We became two determined women : Pauline Canterberry and Mary Miller become the sylvester dustbusters
Let us live in our mountains : Joan Linville's fight for her homeland
You gotta go and do everything you can
fight for your kids : Donetta Blankenship speaks out against underground slurry injections
It's just a part of who I am : Maria Lambert and the movement for clean water in Prenter
I'm not an activist against coal, I'm an activist for the preservation of my state : Teri Blanton and the fight for justice in Kentucky
I'm not going to be run out, I'm not going to be run over, I'm not going out without a fight : Patty Sebok's battle against monster coal trucks
Our roots run so deep, you can't distinguish us from the earth we live on : Debbie Jarrell and the campaign to move Marsh Fork elementary school
It's not just what I choose to do, it's also, I think, what I have to do : Lorelei Scarboro's drive to save coal river mountain
Money cannot recreate what nature gives you : Donna Branham's struggle against mountaintop removal
I want my great-great-grandchildren to be able to live on this earth! : the legacy of the courageous Julia "Judy" bonds
Conclusion
Notes
References
Index.
Local Note
Electronic reproduction. Palo Alto, Calif. : ebrary, 2013. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ebrary affiliated libraries.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references and index.
Source of Description
Description based on print version record.
Available in Other Form
Print version: Bell, Shannon Elizabeth. Our roots run deep as ironweed : Appalachian women and the fight for environmental justice. Urbana, Chicago, and Springfield : University of Illinois Press, [2013] xii, 210 pages
Linked Resources
Language
English
ISBN
9780252095214 e-book
9780252037955 (cloth) (alkaline paper)
9780252079467 (paperback) (alkaline paper)
9780252037955 (cloth) (alkaline paper)
9780252079467 (paperback) (alkaline paper)
Record Appears in