Rancho Las Voces: Galería / Dylan Vitone
Para Cultura, el presupuesto federal más bajo desde su creación / 19

jueves, octubre 26, 2006

Galería / Dylan Vitone


De la serie South Boston

In October, 1994 U.S. News & World Report revealed that South Boston, Massachusetts had the highest concentration of impoverished whites in America. Littered with disturbing statistics, the article reported that in certain sections of this neighborhood three-fourths of the families were without fathers and eighty-five percent of the people were collecting welfare.

As I researched the area’s history, I found that this closed, blue-collar community still lived in the shadows of the 1970s racial riots it endured when the United States government tried to integrate South Boston schools. South Boston was labeled a place that did not take well to outsiders. Most politicians did not want to be connected to South Boston and the racist overtones that came with it. They seemed to ignore it and the growing problems it faced. With this in mind, I started my two-year project of documenting this community.

As I started photographing I found that in its time in exile, South Boston developed its own identity. The individuals living there turned to the community itself for strength. In the process they developed a sense of identity and pride that seems to be their own. My work is about recording this insular community and all of its idiosyncrasies.

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