Guitars and Cadillacs and Hillbilly Music

Don’t ask me why, but this twangy country song got in my head today. And of course, once in there, it didn’t want to leave. So I was humming it all day. It reminded me of a conversation I once had with a Jordanian man about my dad. I was trying to explain that my dad was a “redneck” which doesn’t really translate in Arabic (or French—we only grow ‘em in the Good Ole US of A, folks!). He couldn’t get the concept.

The closest thing I could think of was “fellahi” in Arabic, which means peasant or farmer, not redneck. But my former students used to say it with the same look-down-your-nose disdain. They would insult each other’s clothes as something a “fellahi” would wear. If I went shopping and commented on something I liked in a store window, the girls would burst out giggling and say, “Oh, miss, that’s so fellahi!” I would then keep my apparently backwoods opinions to myself.

So, in talking with the Jordanian, I used the “fellahi” word, but tried to add some paint to the word picture. How do you describe a redneck to someone from outside of America? Suddenly his face lit up, and he nodded with understanding. “Oh, you mean like a ‘hilly-billy’?” After I stopped laughing, I corrected him on the term, and then figured it was close enough, so I said, “Yeah, like that.”

But I have often since wondered, what is the difference between a “redneck” and a “hillbilly”? Those of you who are experts, please enlighten us all!

Comments

Dad said…
First, let me say, we prefer the term "Mountain William" to hillbilly. Secondly, the difference between hillbillies and rednecks is cultural.

Hillbillies are a culture of their own. Fiercely independent and self-sufficient their approach to life is based upon locale and heritage.

Rednecks are often the result of station in life. Life knocks the feet out from under them and they accept it as fate and settle into a lower approach to life.

Both are fueled by heritage but one has a sense of being and the other a sense of being less. Of course, this is just my humble “fellahi” opinion.
Ben Rainey said…
According to a self-professed Redneck,Phil Foster defines a Hill billy as someone from the hills who is considered simple. A redneck comes from farmers in the valley (See Manasas/Warrenton area farms) who gain a red neck from looking down while farming all day.

In other news I would love to have heard a Jordanian say, "Oh you mean Hlly Billy!"
Ariel Rainey said…
What pastor said seems to coincide with what Uncle Mike emailed me, a geographical difference basically: one up in the mountains and the other "down the mountain" in the valley. Like I told him, whichever people are they seem to be darn proud of it! That goes along with what Dad said about using it as a "definition" or maybe excuse of their behavior.

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