Artifact 2

Help Received: Class discussion, Video, Own thoughts.

 

The Mosuo are a matrilineal rural culture in China. They are female centric meaning that the females are the center of the household, take care of the property, raise kids and are allowed to have multiple partners. This allows them run their households and pursue their career with complete freedom from the bonds of marriage. On the flip side however this means that the men are free to sleep with whomever they want whenever they want. Which means they are not around to help support and protect the family or raise kids. I think this is a little odd, I think that kids regardless if they are sons or daughters need the guidance and mentorship of the father as well as the mother. Both are equally as important.

The part that I don’t understand (and maybe I’m just a romantic) but for me I can only love one person. I do not understand how someone can chose to have kids with someone and be in an open relationship with someone else. Where is the jealousy? I would not be able to stand my partner seeing someone else for one second. I also kind of feel like the system that the Mosuo pressures men to be dishonorable. By taking away marriage they are free to do whatever they want but on the flip side you cant really have love if your seeing multiple people.

Men are also traditionally the protectors of the household. And in a country like China where firearms are banned you need men to protect the household, and from the looks of their society there is a complete lack of security for women and children which is not good.

Artifact 7

Patrick Keller

 

Help received:  movie and personal experiences

 

Robert Eads is the transgender man from rural Georgia which the documentary Southern Comfort  focused on. He was originally born a girl and even got married to a man as a woman but felt deep down that he was really a man so he got a divorce from his husband and underwent the process to become a man. He then began attending Southern Comfort Conferences (A National Meeting of Transgenders) every year. As a result of this he gained a new family a family of transgenders. He even met his partner Lola (ironic name) and they began living together. He however had a stroke of bad luck and developed ovarian cancer, Ironically the one part of him that was still female was going to kill him.  He ended up attending one last conference and speaking at it before passing away.

The film talks about the challenges that the transgender community faces in their families, public, and in politics. I covers personal challenges of the characters and what they had to do when they came out. It says that most transgenders get abandoned by their biological family. This makes their non-biological family even more important. This rejections has huge psychological ramifications which include depression, drug and alcohol abuse as well as suicide. So my family actually has experience in dealing with this. My moms side of the family are the Malones and are very Irish which means we are already more prone to substance abuse. So all of the males on my moms side are alcoholics and or drug addicts. Most will not admit to it and after my uncle showed up drunk and high to a family gathering and OD-ed outside my mom forced him to go to rehab which was tough for him because he hadn’t been sober since he was 15 and he was now 56. He was rehab for a total of 9 months and I would go down with my mom to visit him. Now historically Uncle Dennis had been a jerk to my mom so I was not a huge fan of him anyway. But one day she had to break the news to him that he was going to have to be in rehab for 6 more months he got up and ran across the room and tried to attack my mom and I had to punch him in the face to get him to stop. I was 15.

So he ended up staying in rehab for another 6 months and sobering up and became nicer to my mom. Keep in mind that my mom was the only one who gave a shit about him and tried to help him she sacrificed many months of her time away from us down in California trying to help him through his issues without any thanks. My mom finally felt like she had the brother she never had. Things started finally going really well and we finally got our mom back. we thought she would never have to deal with that again. My mom was so inspired by what she did with my uncle that she helped start the local youth rehab center so that “nobody in our community would end up like my uncle”. I could never put my finger on it but he always acted really strange I thought it was the 40 years of drug abuse but I wrong.

So last year spring semester I studied abroad in Costa Rica so I didn’t talk to my family very much during that time at all. One day I called my mom just to check in, the conversation was pretty typical until my mom nonchalantly said “oh by the way uncle Dennis in now aunt Denise” I though she was kidding so I started laughing (my mom has a habit of playing sick jokes on me). She said she wan’t kidding but I didn’t believe her. It was not until a month later when I talked to my brother John, I mentioned what my mom said and he said it was true… I was dumbfounded but it make a lot of sense and explained the 40 years of drug abuse. While I thought that was really weird, I typically have no problem with people like transgenders or gays unless they flaunt it in my face then I get annoyed. So it was whatever, and I didn’t really hear much about it again until earlier this year when he started drinking again… and being a piece of crap to my mom again. He sent her all sorts of horrible emails and phone calls. He broke my moms heart, and threw all her efforts down the drain and claimed he was not trans anymore. We have since cut off all communication with him or her or whatever. He’s dead to me as far as I’m concerned. I think he is severely mentally ill and I don’t think it can be fixed. Maybe this has affected my view of this community as a whole but we have been dealing with this for years, I think these people are mentally ill, and thats what causes them to be confused the way they are. It is NOT natural for men to become women and women to become men and quite frankly I think it is gross and wrong. So that has been my experience with the trans community. I don’t think that someone born a female is actually a dude.. they are a chick, they might not even like that fact but thats what it is .. a fact.. I can see how people could be mentally ill and be confused or thin that they are something they are not. I have a rock and a leaf and no matter how much the rock wants to be a leaf it is still a rock. end of story.

Artifact 5

Patrick Keller

Help Received: Powerpoints, Class discussions and Videos on canvas

 

Female Circumcision

What is it

There are many different types of female circumcision all around the world some are solely for ceremonial purposes, some are for spiritual purposes and some are for cosmetic purposes. There are also degree of severity in female circumcision type. Type 1 is the least severe, type 2 more severe, and type 3 being the most sever and frankly just wrong.

 

Type1

Type 1 Circumcision or “Sunna Circumcision” is the mildest type of circumcision. It is practiced all across Africa and the Middle East and is considered a right of passage and a religious necessity taught by Muhammad in Islam. The actual procedure includes removal of the prepuce and some or all of the clitoris.

type 2

Type 2 circumcision is a less severe version of Infibulation that was created when type 3 circumcisions were outlawed by the British. It was invented by Sudanese midwives in 1946. The operation includes partial or entire removal of the clitoris and the removal of the labia minora. This type of circumcision is practiced widely in Sub Saharan Africa.

type 3

Type 3 is the most severe form of female circumcision. Also known as Infibulation or Pharaonic circumcision this procedure removes the clitoris completely as well as the labia minora. The labia majora is then sewn together and only small openings are kept open for menstrual fluid and urine. It is practiced in Somalia, Sudan, the southern part of Egypt and some regions of Western Africa. This type of circumcision causes loss of sexual pleasure in women as well as severe mental problems.

type 4 pericings + cerimonial

Type 4 is considered an alternative to actual circumcision and includes piercings or doing a small ceremonial cut of the vagina.

elimination and problems

Circumcision is very hard to eliminate for a few reasons the first reason is because it is a tradition and those are typically hard to get rid of especially when that country is very poorly educated. Even if people are educated Circumcision is often a religious practice which makes it all but impossible to get rid of in that religions area of influence. Even if this practice is made illegal we will never get rid of it as we live in reality and in reality when you make something illegal it will just continue in a black market.

interview project

Patrick Keller

Interview project final

ERH 303WX-01

12/12/2018

HR: BR’s, General knowledge about Appalachia gained from the course and previous papers. No specific sources used in writing the paper.

 

Me: Okay, Thanks for coming today! first question where did you grow up in Appalachia?

Leuelin: I grew up in Cabin Virginia, it’s southwestern Virginia Near the north Carolina Virginia state line. It’s actually near the small town of mount airy north carolina also known as Mayberry if you ever watch the Andy Griffith show.

Me: No way that’s freaking cool! My parents love that show and we still watch it.

Leuelin: Yeah it’s based off my hometown.

Me: Alright so second question. Do you Identify as Appalachian? If so, why?

Leuelin: I definitely say that I consider myself Appalachian and that’s usually just because I was raised to do more with less, I was raised to always work hard, always treat people with hospitality and respect. and just living a simpler way of life and using common sense to solve pretty complicated problems.

Me: Alrighty, third question, what would you describe as aspects of Appalachian people and Appalachian culture?

Leuelin: Uh, Big thing Like I said earlier is just doing more with less a lot of people they grew up in the great depression and stuff like that. they were used to having a lot less and working really hard for what they have. You’ll often go into a job or something and they’ll just ask ya how much do you work. You just show that your a good worker they’ll keep ya even if you don’t do the best job as long as you’re there working and putting forth a hard effort. and also on something like that a big thing is just the manners If you do that a lot of the older people will really respect you.

Me: So, fourth question, can you tell if someone is from Appalachian or is not from the region?

Leuelin: Yeah you can tell there is plenty of ways of telling usually by the way they talk if they usually get pretty aggravated talking to someone trying to hurry them up. for us if your sitting down talking with someone I’ve been in a store, gone in, for just a jug of milk and ended up just talking to someone for 45 minutes. cause your just being civil with them.

Me: do you consider Appalachians to be culturally different in any way from other people in the US?

Leuelin: I would definitely say so i mean there’s no many places that places as much pride in hard work. we kinda share were definitely still kinda see ourselves separate from the rest of the nation. Because we see all this craziness going around and were just trying to stay sane in our own little small town deal with ourselves be successful for ourselves and help out our community. also with that is I mean we just end up having a lot of stuff where anywhere else would be considered impolite , with the Civil War and stuff despite everything the war is still recent on a lot of people’s minds it’s still a big thing and you’ll still hear em  calling anyone from north of the Mason Dixon yanks and stuff like that.

Me: I got called a yank when I came here and I’m from Oregon so that was interesting.

Leuelin: So anyway, and for a lot of stuff like that and then we still don’t see the flag (confederate) as like hate. People don’t know what hate speech is a lot it is old timing ways of saying stuff That the words would normally be very offensive but for that you just know that it means an entirely different thing. So like “cotton pickin” for example a lot of people think oh that’s racist because it relates to slavery but its just cause picking cotton sucks. and that was always a real big thing. and a redneck isn’t some hillbilly hill jack, he works hard for his living and literally the back of his neck is burnt because he’s been out in the sun all day.

Me: What role if any does family play in your life?

Leuelin: It’s usually pretty big even with around like family meals and stuff you’ll invite people that you normally don’t, and especially with my family there is feuding going on. yeah and it makes it pretty hard but even then like around Christmas thanksgiving or anything like that well still cook a big mess of food up for everybody. make that and spread it to everyone else and we’ll make sure and give it to them even if we aren’t on speaking terms with them well still give them a call saying hey we just cooked up you can come by and eat with us if you want and sit a spell of if you want we can drop it by your house.

Me: so do you think feuding is like a big issue or not?

Leuelin: Depends on which generation? it’s usually across generations that your getting the feuding. So with a lot of the older people, um, they usually worked out together. and then they are used to being around each other but then they’ll be feuding with someone else who is like from a middle age generation. something like that but even the middle age there’s more. That is also your family builds a reputation, for us I was always told never mess with an Ayers, a pack or an Allen. All the Ayers are crazy, all the Packs run their mouths all the time, and Allen’s well ya know we have a saying “pink Allen white rabbit” from where they inbred a lot. They have like different complexions and ya just know it. your like oh… there’s an Allen. and it’s just something that’s just widely accepted from around where we are. and the like dynamic of the name changes after a while. MacMillen or McMillan are known as hard workers in orchards. that being said don’t ever loan us a truck because if we break it well fix it and it’ll run but it’s gonna be broke at some point.

Me: Number 7, growing up how do you remember Appalachian being portrayed in the media?

Leuelin: I definitely remember seeing it, well with the Andy Griffith show we were kind of portrayed as this idyllic place, and a lot of people try and emulate that but then they go outside of town and it’s a bunch of hilljacks which is kind of like the N word for us.

They always see us as stupid illiterate inbreds.  But really you don’t know that that man there has worked all of his life than you’ve worked ever and it’s just such a strange dynamic because you’ll be there and you’ll know the culture there will be commonly accepted terms like there will be a standard greeting of the day you know “ how ya doin? Well ya know I woke up above the dirt so pretty well. But other people might say well your car broke down but you woke up above the dirt. It’s just a kind of baseline that as long as you’re alive you’re doing pretty well. and for us a lot of other places don’t really understand that i’ve noticed and especially here people will just look at me like I’m weird. You’ll have really fun sayings like uhh, ”hanging in there like a hair on a biscuit” and its just to make them laugh and get a smile on their face. And people look at you like “your an idiot” whereas if you go down south people are just like “oh he’s a good ole country boy having a good time” and that’s really a big change in the views.

Me: Number 8 do you, your family or your friends prepare and eat certain kinds of food?

Leuelin: Uh we definitely do, big ole pounds of cornbread, hog Dow? we have pinto beans, collared greens, mustard greens, turnip greens and also vinegar beans. and that’s pretty exclusive and well endue, and it’s the old fashioned way of canning green beans. You don’t have a pressure canner to pressure it and make sure it seals right, so you do it the old timey way and add vinegar and that would add acidity to it to where bacteria and stuff wont grow in it. and it adds that flavor and vinegar is used in almost every southern cuisine at some point weather it be greens or anything else like that.

Me: interesting.  Okay, number 9. What would you consider to be respectful in your community?

Leuelin: for us it’s definitely manners and just respect for the elders. you know, yes ma’am, no ma’am, yes sir, no sir. also holding the door open for an elderly person, even till like 15 feet away where most people think its awkward to hold it, it shows that your looking out for them.  and a lot of worked really hard in their lives so their body is tore up. there was an old man who used to come into my store that was a coal miner. Broke every bone in his body. He had steel rods in every limb. and he would still come out and walk around and still be willing to help you do your job just to be nice or something so if i can hold the door for him thats the least i can do. and you’ll never really know who you’ll meet cause you’ll meet some people who are really influential have a lot of money and can get you a job where it’s really nice and they wot look like anything. If you help them our it will pay out in the long run for both ends.

Me: Okay, number 10. What would you consider to be disrespectful in you community

Leuelin: definitely disrespect of elders, lack of common courtesy for stuff like that and not keeping your word. A lot of stuff in southern, at least in our Appalachian culture is based on your word. So, you take them at their word and then if they don’t follow through on it, it’s not just them that’s put down but it’s their entire family. Shelia is married to Jim and we were gonna sell a car but, did not split it 50/50 with me. it could even be like yeah this fella he was gonna come help me out on the farm and he never showed up. Then no one is gonna take him at this word. It’s always like kind of a fun saying we have “you can’t cash my check but you can take me at my word. so were not always the most when you don’t have anything else you still have your honor and integrity.

Me: cool alright. that coincides a lot with the values here that’s interesting. What do you think is a common misconception about Appalachian people?

Leuelin: Uh just once again going back to the intelligence thing, because a lot of people could literally fix a truck with a mountain dew can a clothes hanger and some duct tape. I’ve seen it happen before and it’s stuff where normally like its 500 dollars and three days to fix it and some boy just gets under the truck with a mountain dew can and fixes it. its like whoa okay well there’s that. and then also the general standing of wealth. like how people come into work with ratty clothes all tore to pieces, like my boss he’s well off he has a 2.5 million dollar house he has 7 corvettes and stuff like that. You’d never know it because he’s wearing wranglers with holes in it stained all to wazoo, wearing white sneakers that have the bottoms tore out of them. and half the time he’s not even wearing a shirt and if he is it’s raggedy and been torn by barbed wire and stuff. and you’d never know that man has that kind of money but he does. you’ll see an old man sitting on a bench or something reading a newspaper and he might be wearing like Sunday clothes or something and you don’t think anything and then you watch him and he gets in a brand new Cadillac. and your like “oh wow that dude was actually rich.” Stuff like that is people don’t look beyond skin depth the Appalachian culture is so much more than that.

Me : What would you want young people to know about Appalachian people and culture.

Leuelin : I would say doing more with less. that is a huge part of Appalachian culture and I think that really extends from the reconstruction era after the civil war where the south wasn’t helped it was just pushed off to the side and let on it’s own saying figure it out yourself. and then with the great depression a lot of people were hit hard with that. with textile corporations putting the small farms out of business. they are always being kicked down and never raised up so they are constantly used to just having to do what they need to do to get the job done no matter what it takes. So that’s a really important think. and I’d definitely say that people need to be a lot more careful with pain killers and stuff like that cause right now a lot of people in my generation and older are getting hooked on painkillers. It’s just, it’s really destroying the Appalachian culture.

Me: Well hey thank you for doing the interview today, appreciate it man.

 

Reflection Essay: 1040 words

 

Humbleness, it’s a quality most people seem to have lost in the modern world. That being said most of the time when I interact with people from Appalachia I get the impression that they are very humble. They don’t brag much and if they are well off you would never know it. It’s not necessarily that the culture in Appalachia is that different it’s that they have retained the social skills and manners that the rest of the country has lost especially in the cities. A second thing is the positivity. No matter how tough their existence is they always say they are doing well.

 

When I started the interview I was not really worried about offending my subject as I would treat them with the same dignity and respect just as I have experienced in the last couple year of living in Appalachia. I started off by asking a few basic questions: Where are you from in the region? Do you see yourself as Appalachian ect. As it turns out he lives super close to Mount Airy which for those that do not know Is the town that the Andy Griffith Show was based off of. I thought this was super interesting because my parents would always watch that show with us when my brothers and I were little. The way my parents explained it they said that’s an example for us of how society should be and how we should act manners wise.

 

This is in contrast with the stereotypes that we have learned about in class which says that Appalachians are a bunch of unintelligent standoffish hicks on meth where as in the show they are portrayed as down to earth and welcoming. In the show you always see people holding doors open for each other and greeting each other on the street where as everywhere else it seems like people could care less about each other. I’ve had nothing but good experiences in Lexington as well people always greet me on the street and will just randomly strike up a conversation with me. A big thing that I have noticed is that they never talk about themselves and always ask you questions and even when you do ask them questions they downplay everything.

 

One of the main things that stuck with me from the interview is when Llewellyn said “he’s well off he has a 2.5 million dollar house he has 7 corvettes and stuff like that. You’d never know it because he’s wearing wranglers with holes in it stained all to wazoo, wearing white sneakers that have the bottoms tore out of them”. This goes back to the main topic of this reflection which is humbleness. This is the quality I admire most about the Appalachian people probably because it’s the way I was raised. I even feel a little weird saying this but my dad has done pretty decent for himself but you would never know that because he dresses in flannels, blue jeans and a 30 year old pair of boots that have been repaired multiple times. He drives old beat up cars and never gets rid of, or buys anything if  he can help it. So you would never suspect that he has any money at all and that’s just the way he likes it because people don’t treat him differently. The lessons I gleaned from my dad about not boasting, living simply and being humble and thankful for everything you have, have largely been confirmed by my experiences living here, interacting with the people and taking this class.

 

Then there is the stereotype of violence. This is one of the big things that critics of the region will use to put it down. Yes it’s true Appalachia has had its share of violent events in its past just like everywhere else. And yes people may have resorted to violence more often because of the austerity of the region and the lack of effective law enforcement in sufficient numbers. But when it comes down to it they are not necessarily inherently violent but you mess with their family, those they love, their livelihood or property they’ll fight to the last man against you. I’ll take people that will fight for what they love over the critics who won’t stand for anything.

 

The other stereotype is that of unintelligent, the belief that Appalachians are inherently intellectually inferior. I would argue that they are some of the most intelligent people on the planet but this depends on your definition of intelligence. Appalachians are some of the most street smart people on earth. They know how to take care of themselves make due with less and I think this is more important than having book smarts. I guarantee you that most of those people who criticize the region have no street smarts and wouldn’t be able to survive out in the sticks. Being book smart is fine but you better get the street smarts first because all those books don’t matter if you can’t survive in the real world. This being said Appalachia has its share of billionaires and famous academics. Don’t let their slow drawl fool you they are usually pretty damn smart.

 

The Appalachian lifestyle is not something to scoff at, it is something to emulate. We learn values like family first, standing up for what you believe, humbleness and street smarts. They can help us realize that we don’t need a bunch of fancy expensive things and that you can be happy with less. If people today were as polite and respectful as Appalachians the world would be a much nicer place. Maybe just Maybe the threat of a violent response to someone messing with your family or property will make the world a more respectful place. Being able to know you have a lot but being humble about it will get you far in life and make it much easier to get along with folks. That being said you have to be able to go from zero to 100 really quick to protect those you love, this doesn’t mean that you should be violent all the time but you should be willing to do violence for the ones you love.

 

post 10

I found an article published in garden and gun magazine that offered an interesting perspective on the movie as it included interviews of people with of perspective even some that knew the author James Dickey. some accounts were positive and some were very negative. I seemed that those that didn’t actually live in Appalachia liked the movie and thought the book was an expert literary work. Those who lived in Appalachia however were really pissed off . One such person stated “You can go up to the mountains with my people and we may kill you, but we’re not going to f*** you.” (gun and garden). The Appalachians are mad because Dickey is an outsider and he basically calls them stupid brutish and even predatory, which they know isn’t true. He brought really negative stereotypes about Appalachians into the theaters and homes of millions of Americans who would have no reason to think negatively of Appalachians otherwise. It seems that the most memorable and most horrifying scene for Appalachians in deliverance was the rape scene as it portrayed them as rapists which is absolutely false. while this scene is probably the most memorable scene but those who do not live in the mountains seem to remember the cliff scene and the banjo scene the best.

9

The first article was about the Kentucky cycle and basically just stated that although the play was very popular in the west it was largely unpopular in Appalachia. Among other stereotypes it underplayed the amount of people that wanted to strike in 1922 which was basically all the coal miners and the injustices they had to fight.

Post 8

In response to the play “The Kentucky Cycle” a columnist from the Courier Journal of Louisville John Pearce Said that the play was a literary equivalent of a drive by shooting. Many people outside of Appalachia find this confusing because Schenkkan did his research and genuinely cared about the plight of the Appalachian people. While his intentions are good stereotypes in Appalachia are like unwanted nicknames at home while your friends might not have any ill intent everyone still hates being associated with that nickname. Essentially what that play did was showcase all the negative stereotypes about Appalachia to people outside of the region. it portrayed them as unintelligent, primitive and poor. that made a lot of people angry  because they were being unfairly judged by an outsider, even though his message was to help the people of the region the people are so independent and don’t want to look weak or receive help from outsiders which only strengthens the stereotypes of standoffish, mean, and violent people. many from the region say that it was a very Hollywood tacky version of reality which only amplified the stereotypes. In short they believe the way in which they were portrayed was was too dark violent and mean and reflected poorly on them to the rest of the nation.

7

The people that benefited from keeping the Appalachian culture down were usually businesses. These industries suck as coal and timber benefited from having an uneducated labor force which kept them from rising up and forming unions against them.  This allowed the area to be exploited for its resources without much resistance from the simple hillbilly. This allowed the eastern businessmen to keep wages low and make huge profits. It also benefited the psychs of easterners in general an allowed them to feel superior. But all of this was simply propaganda, as with every time a certain portion of the population is oppressed. You make one group look inferior and the population stats to believe it and eventually those people will start to believe it and it will make them more submissive and easier to exploit for labor and resources. I think that with the study of Appalachia in university today will help turn the tide and erase some of the propaganda the has falsely portrayed the area as backward. People are beginning to realize that Appalachia is very modern and that those stereotypes are largely un true. we must continue to talk about the important intellectuals that cone from Appalachia.

Hillbilly vs Redneck

Help Received: Urban Dictionary lol

 

So what are hillbillies and what are rednecks? Are there any differences between the two? Both are generally regarded as relatively uneducated white people but the difference is in location. Hillbillies are typically only from the Appalachian region and are considered unsophisticated. Rednecks on the other hand can be from anywhere they are typically belligerent, drunks, gun owners and conservatives.. at least according to the left rednecks are known for being politically active on the right for anti abortion and gun rights organizations. this is in stark contrast with hillbillies who are historically a silent political group and feel left behind by american politics until recently. When trump ran for president he ran on the platform of bring jobs back to the forgotten people, and by the “forgotten people” he was referring to Appalachians. He wanted to move back to coal energy and wanted to enrich the extremely poor areas of Appalachia. this is the reason I think Trump got elected because the Appalachians were a largely forgotten people. Some other stereotypes of these two peoples are that Hillbillies are all moonshiners and anti government the “south will rise again types” and of course they sleep with their cousins. rednecks are a little more generic: Own an arsenal of firearms, exclusively shop at Walmart, overweight, ect.

Kincheloe

Help received: The reading

 

McDonald’s is a representation for american society in a bunch of different ways. The one that comes to mind for me is the atmosphere of the restaurant. It is geared toward the blue collared american much in the same way that ford’s model t was in the early 1900s. McDonald’s represents America’s mass production economy and sometimes that can be a negative thing especially in foreign countries. Kincheloe even said that some McDonald’s locations in Sweden were bombed because the Swedes viewed them as American imperialism. But think about when you enter a McDonald’s restaurant nobody is wearing fancy clothes, Table manners are not a thing, and Everything is relatively cheap. It is the Walmart of the fast food world. Americans want it fast cheap and greasy and McDonald’s delivers, and is the epitome of american fast food. This can be linked to Appalachian society because many in Appalachia are poor so they do not have the means to afford much else other than McDonald’s so it could be viewed by some as a resturant for “Hillbillies” however I do not thing it is limited the Appalachia as it caters to low income populations of all types in the city or the country.