ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 8月21日 06時47分


Herb E. Smith has spent the past half-century documenting union fights, mine disasters, polluted land and water, and wrenching cycles of boom and bust. A filmmaker and the son of a miner, Herb was one of the founders of Appalshop, an arts organization in Whitesburg, Kentucky, that grew out of President Lyndon B. Johnson’s War on Poverty. Appalachia looks different today than it did then. Nearly 13,000 coal jobs have disappeared in Kentucky since President @Barack Obama took office. So as elected officials, business leaders, environmentalists and community advocates reimagine the economy of central #Appalachia, Appalshop has also been doing some rethinking. In March, it unveiled a for-profit digital marketing venture, Mountain Tech Media. The company, a worker-owned cooperative, has 2 full-time employees on a team of 12. The hope is to hire local young people over time. After all, reimagining central Appalachia will take more than putting unemployed miners back to work. It will also require giving young people a reason to stay. @george_etheredge photographed Herb at an abandoned coal mining site. Visit the link in our profile to read more. #nytweekender


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