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America's forgotten working class: Hillbilly Elegy in 4 minutes

Jul 18, 2021 · 4 mins read

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A culture in crisis

Some people succeed despite their upbringing, not because of it. JD Vance is one of those people. He grew up under the care of his gun-toting “Mamaw” Bonnie Blanton, known as the toughest woman in Jackson, Kentucky – a place few people even try to escape.

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The people of Jackson may have been dirt-poor and laden with vices, but young JD loved his home. The circumstances were objectively bad in a socioeconomic sense, but the people were proud – and Vance was proud of them.

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Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis is JD Vance’s story. It was heralded as  a bellwether for the forgotten masses who elected Donald Trump president in 2016, when the book became a number one New York Times bestseller. It’s now a film directed by Ron Howard.

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Vance views the US as split into “two separate worlds”: working-class white America and then everyone else. Where most people in the latter category are intent on giving their children the best chance to succeed, parents in Appalachia’s ‘hillbilly’ culture often don’t know where to start.

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This is how the author defines that world: “We do not like outsiders or people who are different from us, whether the difference lies in how they look, how they act, or, most important, how they talk.” That insular identity, often referred to as ‘redneck’ or ‘white trash’, inspires fierce loyalty.

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The root of such unbending pride is Scots-Irish honor culture: a value system where you mind your business and don’t ask for help. If justice needs to be done, you handle it yourself – no questions asked. But there’s also a “learned helplessness” that keeps many poor and apathetic.

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Vance paints a dire picture of “Rust Belt” America: rampant abuse of pharmaceutical drugs, overspending to look rich while children go hungry, zero upward mobility, and even less faith in education. Companies are unable to fill positions yet somehow unemployment remains high.

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In his own life, Vance encountered a series of traumatic incidents that he considers typical of his community. Most of these were at the hands of his mother who struggled with addiction and beat him physically. One day, she threatened to kill them both while speeding on the highway.

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Later in life, Vance learned of “adverse childhood experiences” (or ACEs) such as being exposed to abuse and addiction. He scores six out of 10 on the ACE test, putting him in a demographic more likely to develop mental health issues due to the impact of high stress.

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In fact, Vance notes his surprise when he later encounters families – including his future wife’s – who don’t shout at each other, abuse drugs, or get into situations where they need payday loans. He realised that these ACEs create an endless cycle of unstable homes.

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