redneck jokes
redneck
In modern usage, redneck predominantly refers to a particular stereotype of whites from the Southern United States. The word can be used either as a pejorative or as a matter of pride, depending on context.
Modern usage
The redneck stereotype
A redneck is a
stereotypical southern United States socially
conservative,
rural,
working class white person with red skin and northern European ancestry. The stereotypical redneck has a
beer belly, consumes cheap American beer such as
Bud Light by the case, and holds deeply
conservative Dixiecrat political views. The redneck lives in a
trailer, drives a large
pickup truck with a
Rebel flag decal and a
gun rack in the rear window, has a
trucker cap or
baseball cap and a
mullet haircut with long
sideburns. Their favorite activities include
hunting,
professional wrestling,
NASCAR,
monster truck rallies, and car
engine repair.
Country is their preferred genre of music.
The popular
etymology says that the term derives from such individuals having a red
neck caused by working outdoors in the
sunlight over the course of their lifetime. The effect of decades of direct sunlight on the exposed skin of the back of the neck not only reddens fair skin, but renders it
leathery and tough, and typically very wrinkled by late
middle age.
Popular culture
Randy Newman satirized the "redneck"
stereotype in on his
1974 album
Good Old Boys with the song "
Rednecks", with such lyrics as "''We're rednecks, we're rednecks, we don't know our ass from a hole in the ground [...] and we're keeping the
niggers down
".
Comedian Jeff Foxworthy, himself a Southerner and a self-described redneck, has written several best-selling books about the stereotype, including Games Rednecks Play and the You Might Be a Redneck If... series. His works spawned many types of humorous redneck merchandise such as t-shirts and stickers that are quite popular among white southerners. Foxworthy did much to establish "redneck" as a term of pride and endearment by focusing on humorous and positive aspects of redneck culture, and avoiding references to negative aspects, such as the racist connotations that sometimes accompany the term.
Country music singer Gretchen Wilson titled one of her songs Redneck Woman
on her 2004 album Here for the Party.
Author Jim Goad wrote a book titled The Redneck Manifesto'' that explores some of the
socioeconomic history of this word and the people it is leveled at.
Historical usages
Scotland
The word
redneck is first cited in
Scotland, where it referred to supporters of the
National Covenant and
The Solemn League and Covenant, otherwise known as
Covenanters - largely
lowland Presbyterians.
The Covenanters in the mid
1600's signed documents that stated Scotland desired the Presbyterian form of church government and would not accept the
Church of England as its official
state church. To signify their desire, many Covenanters signed the documents in their own blood, would spill their blood to keep this from happening and wore red pieces of cloth around their necks as distinctive insignia - hence the term
Redneck.
These Scottish Presbyterians migrated from their lowland Scottish home to
Ulster (the northern
province of Ireland) during the
17th Century and soon settled in considerable numbers in
North America across the
18th Century. One etymological theory holds that since many
Scotch-Irish who settled in what would become the
South were Presbyterian, the term was bestowed upon them and their descendants.
Related terms
South Africa
In
South Africa, the
Afrikaans term
rooinek (meaning "redneck") was derisively applied by
Afrikaners to the British soldiers who fought during the
Boer Wars, because their skin was sensitive to the harsh African sun. The phrase is still used by
Afrikaners to describe English-speaking white people.
Ironically, the term "redneck" is also used by the English to describe very conservative Afrikaners because of that group's historic support of
apartheid, a system of white, minority power and privilege and black and "colored" exploitation and disenfranchisement, possibly by analogy to the American usage described above.
Barbados
"Poor whites" in
Barbados (descendants largely of seventeenth century
English,
Scottish, and
Irish indentured servants and deportees) were called
Red Legs. Many of these families moved to Virginia and the Carolinas as large sugar plantations replaced small tobacco farming.
See also
-
Good ol' boy network-
List of ethnic slurs-
Hillbilly-
White trash External Links
-
Redneck-bonics; Southern Talk to English (humourous)
Category:American cultureCategory:Social groupscategory:Pejorative terms for people
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