Patricia Cohen’s recent article in the NY Times, “‘Culture of Poverty’ Makes a Comeback,” documents culture once again being used by social scientists as an explanation in discussing poverty.
Cohen begins by setting the historical context.
The reticence was a legacy of the ugly battles that erupted after Daniel Patrick Moynihan, then an assistant labor secretary in the Johnson administration, introduced the idea of a “culture of poverty” to the public in a startling 1965 report. Although Moynihan didn’t coin the phrase (that distinction belongs to the anthropologist Oscar Lewis), his description of the urban black family as caught in an inescapable “tangle of pathology” of unmarried mothers and welfare dependency was seen as attributing self-perpetuating moral deficiencies to black people, as if blaming them for their own misfortune.
The idea was soon central to many of the conservative critiques of government aid for the needy. Within the generally liberal fields of sociology and anthropology the argument was generally treated as being in poor taste and avoided. This time of silence seems to be drawing to a close.
“We’ve finally reached the stage where people aren’t afraid of being politically incorrect,” said Douglas S. Massey, a sociologist at Princeton who has argued that Moynihan was unfairly maligned.
The new wave of culture-oriented discussions is not a direct replica of the studies of the 1960s.
Today, social scientists are rejecting the notion of a monolithic and unchanging culture of poverty. And they attribute destructive attitudes and behavior not to inherent moral character but to sustained racism and isolation.
Cohen continues by providing examples of how culture is now being examined. To do so she turns to Harvard sociologist, Robert J. Sampson. According to Sampson culture should be understood as “shared understandings.”
The shared perception of a neighborhood — is it on the rise or stagnant? — does a better job of predicting a community’s future than the actual level of poverty, he said.
William Julius Wilson, a fellow Harvard sociologist who achieved notoriety through studies of persistent poverty defines culture as the way
“individuals in a community develop an understanding of how the world works and make decisions based on that understanding.”
For some young black men, Professor Wilson said, the world works like this: “If you don’t develop a tough demeanor, you won’t survive. If you have access to weapons, you get them, and if you get into a fight, you have to use them.”
As a result of this new direction in the study of poverty, a number of assumptions about people in poverty have been challenged. One of these is idea marriage is not valued by poor, urban single mothers.
In Philadelphia, for example, low-income mothers told the sociologists Kathryn Edin and Maria Kefalas that they thought marriage was profoundly important, even sacred, but doubted that their partners were “marriage material.” Their results have prompted some lawmakers and poverty experts to conclude that programs that promote marriage without changing economic and social conditions are unlikely to work.
The question remains, why are social scientists suddenly willing to deal with this once taboo approach?
Younger academics like Professor Small, 35, attributed the upswing in cultural explanations to a “new generation of scholars without the baggage of that debate.”
Scholars like Professor Wilson, 74, who have tilled the field much longer, mentioned the development of more sophisticated data and analytical tools. He said he felt compelled to look more closely at culture after the publication of Charles Murray and Richard Herrnstein’s controversial 1994 book, “The Bell Curve,” which attributed African-Americans’ lower I.Q. scores to genetics.
The authors claimed to have taken family background into account, Professor Wilson said, but “they had not captured the cumulative effects of living in poor, racially segregated neighborhoods.”
He added, “I realized we needed a comprehensive measure of the environment, that we must consider structural and cultural forces.”
This surge of interest is particularly timely as poverty in the United States has hit a fifteen-year high. And the debate is by no means confined to the ‘Ivory Tower’.
The topic has generated interest on Capitol Hill because so much of the research intersects with policy debates. Views of the cultural roots of poverty “play important roles in shaping how lawmakers choose to address poverty issues,” Representative Lynn Woolsey, Democrat of California, noted at the briefing.
Comments 4
Joan — October 26, 2010
Wilson, Anderson, and other "old school" scholars talked about culture. Sometimes they just tucked it into their analysis so the readers didn't know they were talking about culture. I think that the big difference is that scholars are more explicit about culture and incorporating more theoretically updated notions of culture. When Edin and Kefals write about the meaning of marriage and motherhood, that framing was influenced by the works of Griswold, Lamont, Geertz, Bourdieu and others...not Lewis.
sarah lageson — November 7, 2010
Jonathon Imber posted a response to the NY times article, called "the forty-year failure of sociology." The posting can be accessed here: http://www.mindingthecampus.com/originals/2010/10/imber.html
An excerpt:
"There are many ironies here, now that the idea of culture has allegedly been resurrected by the present generation of sociologists operating the admission gates to jobs and professional publications. First, the concept of culture is not new in any way, shape, or form in sociology. In fact, the praise for its present revitalization is one of those self-serving promotions that journalists are quick to swallow because they rarely ask the historical question about a concept's use. The culture of poverty concept was much more complex than its public reception could possibly convey, and its general claim came to be seen as much a political conviction (of the wrong kind) as a social-scientific formulation that called for empirical investigation and confirmation....Massey's statement is unbelievably ironic insofar as sociology has consistently been the dungeon of politically correct thought. The other social sciences are beset with incidents of such thought, but a younger generation of social scientists promises to break the lockstep long led unofficially by sociology's relentless criticisms of "conservative" ideas. The sensitivity to appearing to be in "support" of, much less in the camp of, any idea or any group considered conservative is by far one of the most galvanizing reflexes of solidarity among my generation of sociologists. Their inhibitions and anxieties about being even remotely associated with "the other side" is one of the more entertaining features of academic bird-watching. It would be fascinating to learn from Massey how he thinks "we've finally reached the stage" he apparently now applauds. The most obvious answer remains precisely the resistance to the irrelevant imperialism that much of sociology and its elite supporters have promoted during the past forty years. Forty years in the desert."
Orgtheory responded to Imber's piece in a post called "sociology is doing ok": http://orgtheory.wordpress.com/2010/11/05/sociology-is-doing-ok/
An excerpt:
"In the end, I am more impressed with real research than complaints and hand wringing. I look at James Coleman. As we’ve discussed before, Coleman came up with ideas that went against the grain in sociology, even though he was liberal himself. He could have just given up, but he didn’t he hung in there and was vindicated on the strength of the research findings. In the end, I am more impressed with that than worrying about how evil the mainstream of the profession is."
Gayla Chrabasz — January 19, 2013
I wish to convey my love for your kindness in support of men who require help with in this concept. Your personal commitment to passing the solution all-around appeared to be remarkably useful and have specifically allowed some individuals just like me to reach their desired goals. Your new useful guidelines indicates a lot a person like me and somewhat more to my office colleagues. With thanks; from all of us.
Lavonna fashion — April 16, 2015
Excellent website. Lots of helpful info here. I am sending it to several friends ans additionally sharing in delicious. And naturally, thanks to your effort!