Popular Culture Review Vol. 25, No. 2, Summer 2014 | Page 8

State of the Redneck in the Early 21** Century: The Case of Jeff Foxworthy The 1993, death of the thirty-two-year-old NASCAR driver Davey Allison sent a shock through the sport’s legions of fans. On the day of Allison’s funeral, thousands gathered outside St. Aloysius Catholic Church in Bessemer, Alabama to honor the memory of the popular competitor. People magazine later ran an article featuring photographs of the crowd of mourners and some of the creative flower arrangements they bore. It is with these images that American comedian Jeff Foxworthy opens his 1996 autobiography. No Shirt, No Shoes, No Problem. Foxworthy remembers considering the photographs one evening in bed: “Black carnations in the shape of a race car, a big wheel, and who knows what else. It wouldn’t surprise me if someone had made a set of points and plugs out of rose petals” (1). Foxworthy shares the photographs with his wife, and then wonders aloud: “Since people know me mostly as that Redneck guy, I don’t even want to think about the flowers you’d get if I died now. Rebel flags. Brown carnations shaped like a spit of chewing tobacco juice mid-flight” (2). Pondering the article, Foxworthy finds himself strangely troubled. “It took a while before I understood what was bothering me. I felt a kinship with Davey Allison, a regular guy from the South who became a celebrity just doing what he did best” (2). To his wife, Foxworthy asks, “You know. I’m proud of my Southern roots, but don’t you think I should get a little past this Redneck thing before I buy the farm?” (2). Doing so would seem to represent a tall order for the comedian, since being “that Redneck guy” had been the foundation of his initial rise to fame and remained central to his famous joke series, “You might be a Redneck if...” but was also tied to his own self-styled persona of a simple, unsophisticated, working-class guy, a man who was able to make the jokes he did in part because of his own identification as one speaking from within the redneck community. In the years following his autobiography, Foxworthy has indeed maintained his status as “that redneck guy,” and his redneck jokes have continued to proliferate, now numbering well into the hundreds, and pervaded into popular culture. It is not too much to say that since the early 1990s, Foxworthy has become the foremost authority in defining the parameters of the cultural icon that is the American “redneck.” Certainly, the concept of the redneck did not begin with Foxworthy. The figure of a white “Other” has been a staple of American culture, in one form or another and in varying degrees of prominence.