The University of Minnesota’s Joe Soss, recently interviewed for the Office Hours podcast about his new book Discliplining the Poor: Neoliberal Paternalism and the Persistent Power of Race, was featured in the Star Tribune thoughtfully explaining the lessons of his research for the Lori Sturdevant article “It’s Rarely a Luxury to Be in Need of Charity.” As Soss put it, “Our notions about who’s deserving of help and who isn’t are rooted in notions about individual effort and individual success or failure.” But, he told Sturdevant, “It’s become almost a Catch-22… You’re undeserving if you haven’t worked hard enough to lift yourself out of poverty. If you had worked hard, you wouldn’t be poor. So if you’re poor, you must be undeserving.”
And, the columnist relates, maybe, “In frontier Minnesota, hard work could rather reliably produce self-sufficiency. Suspicion of the poor as lazy or profligate arose easily when land was cheap or free, the population was exploding, and harvests of timber, grain and, eventually, iron ore were abundant beyond imagining.” Now that hard times are upon so many, it’s harder to write off the jobless or the poor as deserving of their fate. In this way, the Great Recession may also become something of a Great Equalizer, “opening eyes to to a new reality about work in America,” writes Sturdevant. As Joe Soss said, “Tougher times make people more likely to understand that poverty isn’t just about individual choices.”
Comments 2
Alex Casey — January 4, 2012
It's amazing how the writing from the the "old dead white guys" of classical theory--the ones that bored me to tears when reading them for my theory class this semester--now seem to spring to mind day after day. Reading this piece made me think of what Weber said in The Protestant Ethic and the Spirit of Capitalism. Hard work and moral goodness seem to be indivisibly linked within our society. If we allow ourselves to view the link between wealth and hard work as an indisputable law, then those who remain poor are viewed as being of non-hardworking character, and therefore by nature of the protestant ethic, immoral and undeserving. Attacks on the poor's character appear to be nothing new. Looks like it was worth staying awake during theory class this semester after all.
We, the Unemployed » Citings and Sightings — January 6, 2012
[...] Joe Soss’s comments in the Star Tribune, as covered in Citings & Sightings a couple of days ago, Sternheimer affirmed, “There’s still a lot of antipathy towards [...]