Jason Aldean: Old ‘small towns are more righteous than cities’ trope. Performative tough guy stuff.

Jason Aldean’s “Try That in a Small Town,” which ignited controversy this week over claims that the song and its new video promote white supremacy and violence, is far from the first country song to attack cities using racist dog whistles, writes Amanda Marie Martínez of NPR.

“Try That” is most clearly a descendant of Hank Williams Jr.’s “A Country Boy Can Survive” (1982), which claims, “You only get mugged if you go downtown,” while warning: “I got a shotgun, a rifle and a four-wheel drive, and a country boy can survive,” Martinez continues.

But Aldean’s latest release invokes and builds on a lineage of anti-city songs in country music that place the rural and urban along not only a moral versus immoral binary, but an implicitly racialized one as well. Cities are painted as spaces where crime, sexual promiscuity and personal and financial ruin occur, while the “country” is meanwhile framed as a peaceful space where happiness reigns.

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  1. Thank you, this was brilliantly written, insightful and well worth the read. Sadly I believe you are right, it goes beyond just being a dog whistle. Thanks for the insights & history.

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