Lenoard Pitts, Jr., an African American reporter for the Miami Herald, recently traveled to Eastern Kentucky—an area that was called the Big White Ghetto by one reporter and that was the focus of a story with the headline “What’s The Matter With Eastern Kentucky?” by another reporter—to examine white poverty in one of the nation's poorest regions. (Herald photo by David Stephenson: Samuel Riley buying cigarettes in Booneville, Ky., located in Owsley County, one of the nation's poorest counties)
"Granted, America seldom discusses poverty of any hue, except insofar as
conservative pundits and politicians use it as a not-subtle proxy for
racial resentments among white voters," Pitts writes. "But white poverty is the great
white whale of American social discourse—believed to exist but seldom
seen."
"As it turns out, our deeply racialized view of poverty bears no
resemblance to reality," Pitts writes. "Though it’s true that African Americans are
disproportionately likely to live below the poverty line, it is also
true that the vast majority of those in poverty are white: 29.8 million
people. In fact, there are more white poor than all other poor combined."
"There is a remarkable consistency to the way citizens of the poor,
white mountain South have been portrayed in popular culture and
scholarship. In entertainment, they are narrowly defined as naifs whose
very innocence and trusting nature insulates them from the conniving
machinations of city folk (think Jed Clampett), as lazy sluggards (think
Snuffy Smith), as big, dumb rubes (think Jethro Bodine) or as the
personification of perverse evil (think Deliverance). Women’s
roles are even more constrained: they tend to be either ancient, sexless
crones (think Mammy Yokum) or hyper-sexualized young women (think Daisy
Duke)."
"Get past John-Boy and the rest of 'The Waltons,' and it is difficult to recall a sympathetic portrait of white Southern
poverty in mass media," Pitts writes. "To the contrary, America has always bred a
special contempt for the white poor. As far back as 1866, a Boston Daily
Advertiser writer opined that 'time and effort will lead the negro up
to intelligent manhood, but I almost doubt if it will be possible to
ever lift this ‘white trash’ into respectability.'” As recently as 2010, the Hillbilly to English Translation Dictionary was published with a cover
depicting "a woman with pigtails and a missing front tooth, clutching a
scraggly bouquet. She is wearing a dingy white wedding dress. She is
barefoot and pregnant."
"There is no national advocacy group to defend the white poor against
such libels as this, no analogue of the NAACP or the National
Organization for Women to assert their dignity," Pitts writes. "You may malign them
without a whisper of complaint."
"The invisibility of white poverty, says Edmund Shelby, editor of the
Beattyville Enterprise, is part of the problem," Pitts writes. Shelby told him, “Those of us who are
aware of the issues facing Appalachians and those of us who speak out
about those issues see that as one [thing] that has kept us in the
position that we are in for so long. I think that can be said for a lot
of poor populations because if you can say things about people that
dehumanize them, then there’s no need to help them raise themselves up
in any way because, after all, using that stereotype, they are
incapable.” (Read more)
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