Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis by J.D. Vance — book cover

Book details

Hillbilly Elegy: A Memoir of a Family and Culture in Crisis

by J.D. Vance

2016 · HarperCollins

About the book

J.D. Vance chronicles his upbringing within a Scots-Irish family rooted in the Appalachian hills of Kentucky and the industrial landscape of Middletown, Ohio. He documents the collapse of the white working class through the lens of his own chaotic childhood, marked by his mother’s recurring drug addiction and the stabilizing presence of his grandmother, Mamaw. The narrative connects personal experiences of family instability to broader sociological patterns, such as the decline of manufacturing jobs, systemic poverty, and a lack of social mobility. Vance argues that a culture of resignation and domestic strife perpetuates a cycle of trauma that persists even when economic opportunities remain available, illustrating his eventual transition from this environment to the United States Marine Corps and Yale Law School.

Readers interested in the intersection of class, regional identity, and public policy use this memoir to analyze the social fabric of the American Rust Belt. The text serves as a case study for those studying how adverse childhood experiences and geographical isolation influence political leanings and economic outcomes. Individuals seeking to understand the psychological barriers to the American Dream finish the book with a perspective on how communal values and family structures dictate individual success. It provides an account of the internal and external pressures facing a demographic navigating the transition from industrial stability to contemporary economic displacement.

Details

Published
2016
Publisher
HarperCollins
ISBN
9780062872258
Language
EN