#HTE

A Hidden American Anger (17 photos)

Just over a decade ago, Matt Eich started photographing rural Ohio. Largely inhabited by what is now known as the “Forgotten Class” of white, blue-collar workers, Eich found himself drawn to the proud but economically abandoned small towns of Appalachia. Thanks to grants from the Economic Hardship Reporting Project and Getty Images, Eich was able to capture the family life, drug abuse, poverty, and listlessness of these communities. “Long before Trump was a player on the political scene, long before he was a Republican, these people existed and these problems existed,” Eich said. His new book, Carry Me Ohio, published by Strum and Drang, is a collection of these images and the first of four books he plans to publish as part of The Invisible Yoke, a photographic meditation on the American condition. Even with a deep knowledge of the region, Eich was unprepared for the fury and energy that surrounded the election this year. “The anger is overpowering,” he said. “I knew what was going on, and I’m still surprised. I should have listened to the pictures.”  

Richie Goins Jr. watches from the window of his parents’ trailer as cinderblocks are brought in to make a foundation for his grandmother’s new trailer, March 9, 2006. Leetha Goins, her children—Timmy, 25; Troy, 16—and her grandson, Will, were displaced when a drunk driver swerved off the road and crashed into their trailer in Chauncey, Ohio. Leetha would die of cervical cancer the following year.  (Matt Eich)
http://www.theatlantic.com/photo/2016/12/carry-me-ohio/507539/