Poor Reason Culture still doesn't explain poverty 
 
Stephen Steinberg 
 
"'Culture of Poverty' Makes a Comeback." So read the headline of Patricia  
Cohen's front-page article in the October 17, 2010 edition of The New York  
Times. 
 
The article was prompted by a recent issue of the Annals of the American  
Academy of Political and Social Science under the title, "Reconsidering 
Culture  and Poverty." In their introductory essay, the editors, Mario Luis 
Small, David  J. Harding, and Michèle Lamont, strike a triumphant note: 
 
Culture is back on the poverty research agenda. Over the past decade,  
sociologists, demographers, and even economists have begun asking questions  
about the role of culture in many aspects of poverty and even explicitly  
explaining the behavior of the low-income population in reference to cultural  
factors. Cohen begins with a similar refrain: 
 
For more than 40 years, social scientists investigating the causes of  
poverty have tended to treat cultural explanations like Lord Voldemort: That  
Which Must Not Be Named. 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 his 1965 report on 'The Negro Family.' Cohen uncritically 
accepts two  myths woven by William Julius Wilson, the prominent Harvard 
sociologist, and  repeated by his acolytes: first, Moynihan was clobbered for 
bringing to light  compromising facts about black families, and second, that 
this torrent of  criticism constrained a generation of social scientists from 
investigating the  relation between culture and poverty, for fear that it 
would be pilloried for  "blaming the victim." Thus, a third, patently 
self-serving myth: thanks to some  intrepid scholars who reject political 
correctness, it is now permissible to  consider the role that culture plays in 
the 
production and reproduction of  racial inequalities. 
 
These myths add up to something-a perverse obfuscation of American racial  
history. They suggest that for four decades academia has abetted a censorial 
 form of anti-racism that prevented serious research into the persistence 
of  poverty among black Americans. If only, the mythmakers insist, we stopped 
 worrying about offending people, we could acknowledge that there is 
something  amiss in black culture-not, as the politically correct would have 
it, 
the  politics of class-and that this explains racial inequality. 
 
Notwithstanding the election of Barack Obama, the last 40 years have been a 
 period of racial backlash. The three pillars of anti-racist public  
policy-affirmative action, school integration, and racial districting (to  
prevent 
the dilution of the black vote)-have all been eviscerated, thanks in  large 
part to rulings of a Supreme Court packed with Republican appointees.  
Indeed, the comeback of the culture of poverty, albeit in new rhetorical guise, 
 
signifies a reversion to the status quo ante: to the discourses and 
concomitant  policy agenda that existed before the black protest movement 
forced 
the nation  to confront its collective guilt and responsibility for two 
centuries of slavery  and a century of Jim Crow-racism that pervaded all major 
institutions of our  society, North and South. Such momentous issues are br
ushed away as a new  generation of sociologists delves into deliberately myopic 
examinations of a  small sphere where culture makes some measurable 
difference-to prove that  "culture matters." 
 
Full: _http://www.bostonreview.net/BR36.1/steinberg.php_ 
(http://www.bostonreview.net/BR36.1/steinberg.php) 
 

_______________________________________________
Marxist-Leninist-List mailing list
Marxist-Leninist-List@lists.econ.utah.edu
To change your options or unsubscribe go to:
http://lists.econ.utah.edu/mailman/listinfo/marxist-leninist-list

Reply via email to