Bankruptcy v student loans. No, in the USA you cannot discharge student loans through bankruptcy. You're stuck with them until the day you die. OR, you can work with the US Dept of Education and consolidate them and perhaps get them paid off. They have several repayment plans, some tied to your income. Problem with even the best of those is that they use an imaginary formula to decide how much disposable income you have without taking into consideration the cost of housing, transportation, medical care, etc., that you are having to pay. In my area of the country rental housing is pricey (even now). The forumla thinks I should only be paying about a third of what I pay (and I'm not living "high" - just no bars on the windows and used needles in the alley, thanks!).
The only ways I know of that you can be relieved of your student loans permanently are 1) pay them off (it won't be happening for me); 2) work in a field that the govmt has designated as eligible to reduce your loan payments in return for service; 3) become completely and permanently disabled (although I know of a case where a woman had brain cancer and they would not release her of liability for the loans); 4) be so terribly low income (and we're talking bottom of the barrel here) and have no reasonable expectation of ever getting out of that situation. I have also heard that it depends on where in the country you live, although this might just be an urban legend, and that some administrative judges are a bit less harsh than others as far as deciding what constitutes an impossible situation.
Moral of this story - do not take out student loans unless you are going into a field where you are almost positive you will be able to earn enough to pay them back. Considering today's economy, I would think that would be medicine. Or mortuary science. If you're not studying in a field that's going to give you a pretty cushy return, don't borrow. Most college degrees aren't worth a whole lot in the workforce these days (you can't do a lot with, say, art history). Don't run up bills for something like that - take it slower, earn and pay as you go.