Manchin Is Us & Them

For decades, Joe Manchin has defined and redefined politics in West Virginia. For this episode, Us & Them host Trey Kay asks West Virginia progressives: How is Joe Manchin’s reputation shaping his future and the country’s?

U.S. Sen. Joe Manchin may be redefining the nation’s political landscape by reconfiguring the middle.

While some say he’s tough to predict, others insist Manchin’s consistency has come to serve as an important political reference point. As the spotlight shines on the toxic battle between left and right, a man with decades in public office recently helped deliver a rare compromise bill through Congress.

For the past two years, Joe Manchin has seemed to be at the center of the political debate between us and them. This episode offers perspective and analysis on Manchin’s political legacy and the future as we weigh consequences of the midterm elections and how they may play out on Manchin’s next campaign.

This episode of Us & Them is presented with support from the West Virginia Humanities Council, the CRC Foundation and the Daywood Foundation.

Subscribe to Us & Them on Apple Podcasts, NPR One, RadioPublic, Spotify, Stitcher and beyond.

U.S. Senate Photographic Studio
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Joe Manchin is one of the most polarizing figures in current American politics. He embodies the great national divide between ‘us and them.’  And yet, Manchin has never been the focus of our Us & Them show…until now. 
West Virginia University
David Fryson is pastor of the New First Baptist Church of Kanawha City and is also a Charleston attorney, a diversity professional and frequent contributor to the Charleston Gazette-Mail. As Fryson points out, the African American vote had a lot to do with Manchin’s victory in 2018.
The West Virginia Encyclopedia
Joe Manchin’s electoral record in West Virginia has been remarkable. Through his long career in politics, he has only lost once, in a 1996 gubernatorial primary. The person he lost to was Charlotte Pritt. Although she’s no longer on the front lines, Pritt has maintained her connections and follows politics closely. She has some provocative opinions about how Manchin fits into the national political landscape.
Denise Giardina is a West Virginian through and through. Born in coal country, raised in a coal family, her entire life is rooted in West Virginia. She is also a committed environmentalist. Her unsuccessful run for governor in 2000 was focused on one thing. To raise public awareness of the dangers of mountaintop removal by the coal companies. After the campaign, her continued activism brought her in contact with then Gov. Joe Manchin. She spoke with him during an event at her church.
Anne Cavalier and Joe Manchin
Active Southern West Virginia
Us & Them listeners may recognize Mayor Anne Cavalier. She’s someone we check in with from time to time. Like many West Virginia towns, her town of Smithers is transitioning away from a coal based economy and building toward a tourism-based infrastructure. To assist this transition, Sen. Manchin secured federal funds for the Smithers Integrated Trail system.

New Book Examines Appalachian Author’s Work

Denise Giardina is a highly regarded Appalachian author whose works include “Storming Heaven” and “The Unquiet Earth.” Both of those books are set in West Virginia, in the coalfields. They revolve around the miners’ struggle with mine owners and unions, including the Battle of Blair Mountain in 1921.

In his new book about Giardina’s work, called “Heeding The Call: A Study of Denise Giardina’s Novels,” author William Jolliff explores the deep theological message in Giardina’s works and how he believes her work should be regarded on a national level. Giardina only read the book after it was completed. 

Eric Douglas spoke to both Giardina and Jolliff by Zoom to discuss the new book. 

This interview has been lightly edited for clarity. 

Douglas: What’s it like to have somebody write an entire book about you and your work?

Giardina: Well, it’s very weird, because usually it doesn’t happen until you’re dead. So, I kept thinking, as I was reading it, and ‘I’m still alive, right?’ But it was also fun because I haven’t read those books myself, in some cases, in 30 years. I used to do public readings and I had certain parts that I liked to read because audiences seemed to respond to those. So, I knew those parts really well. But then there were parts of the books that I’d totally forgotten about. 

I guess, if somebody takes enough time, first of all, to read every book you’ve written, and then to write a book about it themselves, they must actually pretty much like it. I mean, when the opposite happens, it’s usually somebody who is dead and famous and some writer decides they’re going to take them down a peg or two. But in this case, I kind of went into it expecting that maybe he kind of likes my books, and he does. Even better, he understands them. I think he really puts a focus on them that needed to be made, which is that I get pigeonholed as a regional writer when in fact, I’m a theological writer. 

Douglas: What does that mean to you? 

Giardina: That’s the way I think. And everything I write comes from that theological perspective; believing in God, and all that that entails, morally and ethically and spiritually. Yet a lot of people don’t understand that because, for example, my books would never be carried in a self-labeled Christian bookstore. There’s too much sex and there’s too much violence. But yet, they’re deeply spiritual, I think, and deeply theological, because those are the questions that interest me. 

Politics interests me. Certainly, the Appalachian region interests me, although not as much as people might realize. But the things that interest me are sin, redemption, forgiveness, love, fear of death, life after death. Those kinds of things are the questions that interest me and that’s what the books are all about. Every single one of them.

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Douglas: Mr. Jolliff, you’re an English professor, right? And you actually teach Denise’s books as, I don’t know if it’s a class itself or as part of one of your classes.

Jolliff: I do both. I started teaching “Storming Heaven,” because it was in an introductory kind of class where I’m trying to get students to engage with a culture very different from their own. If you grew up in the Northwest, Appalachian culture is very different. And so, it was a great tool in that regard. 

Plus, of course, that faith element. I teach at a faith-affirming institution, so students come in with more or less a willingness to look at some of those deep faith aspects. So, I taught it there. And then I started using “Unquiet Earth,” in my 20th century American Literature survey, upper-level course.

Douglas: Mrs. Giardina, I kept flashing back to high school English classes where teachers were trying to tell us, ‘This is what the author was thinking when they were writing this.’ Did he get it right? That’s always the question every teenager has. 

Giardina: In this case, I think he did get I’d say 95 or 96 percent. Maybe just maybe two or three percent that was a little off, that if I sat down with him and talked to him about it, I could say, ‘Yeah, but you know…’ But he really did get a lot of it right. And I felt very good about that.

Credit Eric Douglas / WVPB
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WVPB

Douglas: Mr. Jolliff, who do you want to read the book? 

Jolliff: I want it to be a help for students. Sort of the picture in my mind for the reader is someone who’s far into literature, maybe an upper-level undergrad or someone who’s maybe starting their graduate studies. I wanted this to be sort of a jumping-off point for what those students might think they should study and what they should write about. 

I assumed it would find some kind of reception, whether positive or negative or critical, among people who do Appalachian studies. I mean, she’s just really significant in that area. 

I shouldn’t say the most important, but certainly always in my mind was the fact that there are a lot of folks who write about theology in literature or who write about religion in literature, whom I would really like to somehow put in contact with her work. Her handling of those aspects is on par with anybody, and better than most. And while I like the idea that she’s an Appalachian writer, I would like her work to enter into that bigger conversation of where people write about and study contemporary handlings of theology.

Douglas: Is there anything else that we haven’t talked about that you want to mention?

Jolliff: Only that I maybe I would say this. I started studying her seriously because I was drawn to particular books. And I started teaching her because she fit very well in certain objectives that I had for my classes. But I can’t state too broadly really, or too richly, how much of a great experience it was to get this far into the mind of one great writer.

“Heeding The Call: A Study of Denise Giardina’s Novels” is available through West Virginia University Press. 

Jolliff is currently the chair of the Department of Writing and Literature at George Fox University in Newburg, Oregon. Giardina lives in Charleston, West Virginia and has turned her attention to writing screenplays. 

This interview is part of a series of interviews with authors from, or writing about, Appalachia. 

West Virginia Public Theatre Stages 'Storming Heaven: The Musical'

West Virginia Public Theatre is hosting professional actors and musicians this week in Morgantown. They’re rehearsing a new musical based on a novel about life in the coal camps of southern West Virginia leading up to the historic Battle of Blair Mountain. Authors and musicians aim to highlight the sacrifices that laid the groundwork for the modern labor movement.

The musical is based on the 1987 novel Storming Heaven by West Virginia native Denise Giardina. Giardina says the musical captures the spirit of her book, and that it’s respectful of Appalachian culture.

Artistic Director of the West Virginia Public Theater, Gerald McGonigle, learned about the musical being developed through Giardina and negotiated to bring it in early development to West Virginia.

“As the artistic director, it’s really important to me that we do theater that is vital and important to West Virginians,” McGonigle said. “I was a little skeptical that they could bring the power of the story, Storming Heaven, into the musical theater genre, but in some ways it takes the story and elevates it in a powerful way that is unique to musical theater.”

The novel and the musical are set in southern West Virginia leading up to the largest labor uprising in US history in 1921, the Battle of Blair Mountain.

The musical revolves around a key character in the novel, Carrie. Co-author Katy Blake, who began writing the musical about six years ago, explains Carrie is a coal camp nurse caught in a love triangle.

“That drama is set against the mine wars going on in West Virginia at the time. She’s an educated woman trying to find her place in the world, which mirrors the miners trying to find their place in the world.”

Blake is herself a singer/songwriter and she’s working with other musical professionals to compose the music, like country western musician Tracy Lawrence. Lawrence took a break from touring this week to work in Morgantown on the musical.

“It’s a fascinating story,” he said. “It’s a heartwrecking story about losing people that you love and the struggle that American people went through years ago to get us to the place we’re at now. And I think it’s something everyone should see to get a sense of the sacrifices that were made by the people that came before us.”

“There are a lot of things that spoke to me personally about this story,” Peter Davenport, the other co-author, said. “I come from Flint, Michigan, so I get the whole union thing and I get when an industry leaves a town how devastating it is. I wanted to pay my respects to not just the people of West Virginia but to those people in the United States upon whose backs the industries and this country has been built.”

The musical is still being developed. Student actors and professionals employed with West Virginia Public Theatre have been rehearsing for a public staged reading to get a sense of how the musical is shaping up.

A reading of Storming Heaven: The Musical will be staged in Morgantown on Saturday, January 19, at the Gladys G. Davis Theatre (WVU Creative Arts Center). The event is free and open to the public.

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