" Whereas most crops drive farmers apart as they compete for the
best prices, the price controls on tobacco bring growers together.
The result is a culture unlike any other in America, one often
forgotten or overlooked as federal and state governments fight over
the spoils of the tobacco settlement. Tobacco Culture describes the
process of raising a crop of burley from the perspective and
experience of the farmers themselves. In the process of gathering
information for the book, the authors performed most steps in the
tobacco production process, from dropping plants, burning seedbeds,
topping, and cutting to stripping and baling the finished product.
Van Willigen and Eastwood document both present practices and
historical developments in tobacco farming at the very moment a way
of life stands poised for dramatic change. In addition to growing
practices, the authors found other common threads linking growers
and tobacco producing regions. Where tobacco is grown, it often
becomes the major cash crop and carries the health of the economy.
Farmer Oscar Richardson states, "It's bread and butter. It's the
industry of the community, the state as a whole.... You take
tobacco out of Kentucky and this farmland wouldn't be worth a
nickel." Combining cultural anthropology and oral history, John van
Willigen and Susan Eastwood have created a remarkable portrait of
the heart of the burley belt in Central Kentucky.
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