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The Debt Project

99 Portraits Across America

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available

FEATURED IN THE NEW YORKER: The Faces of Americans Living in Debt

Finalist for the Dorothea Lange/Paul Taylor Prize in Documentary.

Featured on Politico, in the Washington Post, the Daily Mail, and the Huffington Post, USA Today, Business Insider, Refinery29, and Fast Company.

Based on the popular online photo series and now published in print for the first time, The Debt Project collects 99 portraits of debt across the United States, featuring people of all different backgrounds and stories, to recontextualize an often stigmatized experience.

In 2013, Brittany Powell made the difficult decision to file for bankruptcy for her photography business. In the years following the 2008 economic collapse, she found herself in a significant amount of debt, a position many Americans across the country still share, a common yet isolating and private experience often steeped in shame.

Her personal experience, bolstered by the We Are the 99% slogan that came out of the Occupy movement, brought her to start The Debt Project, an exploration of the role debt and finance plays in our personal identity and social structure. This book presents an intimate look into 99 different lives: each shares an arrestingly honest portrait in the person's home, surrounded by all their belongings, accompanied by a handwritten note of the amount of debt that person is in and the story behind the numbers.

The Debt Project, with a foreword by writer and filmmaker Astra Taylor plus resources at the back of the book to support people in debt, examines the social and personal hold financial debt has on us and invites others into a private world, while at the same empowering people to share their stories and overcome the shame they may feel.

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    • Kirkus

      September 15, 2020
      A photographic exhibit of the many faces of American debt. In a book version of an online photo series that Powell began a few months after she filed for bankruptcy in 2012, the author collects raw imagery from a group of 99 contributors, across 17 states, diversified by racial, geographical, and educational backgrounds yet unified by the onerous experience of debt. For each of them, debt is a harsh and constant reality; many cite the common denominators of student loan debt, health care costs and lack of insurance, economic downturn, and sudden job loss as primary causes. The photos and accompanying personal testimonies--rendered in handwritten notes, a choice that makes the words feel immediate and urgent--work together to disarm the shame associated with debt. Pictured in cluttered studio apartments and makeshift corner offices, the profiles range widely across professions: hairstylists, teachers, architects, artists, entrepreneurs, professors, and the executive director of a cannabis cooperative who accumulated more than $900,000 of debt after a federal tax audit and a 10-day stay in the intensive care unit after a brain aneurysm (he had no health insurance). The most heartbreaking profiles are those of nonprofit or care workers who make daily sacrifices for others while their personal finances suffer. For the most part, Powell allows her photographs to speak for themselves, illustrating the strife faced by many who pursued their dreams only to end up faced with insurmountable financial obligations. As one contributor laments, "I wake up everyday [sic] and try to be a person. To afford to be a person. Who feels like me. I am trying on empty." Given the diversity of circumstances as well as levels of debt, this artistic project will resonate with any American who faces debt and any of the other injustices involved with income inequality. A moving, humanitarian expos� on the isolation and despair of financial hardship.

      COPYRIGHT(2020) Kirkus Reviews, ALL RIGHTS RESERVED.

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