Latest Threads
Latest
Greatest Threads
Greatest
Lobby
Lobby
Journals
Journals
Search
Search
Options
Options
Help
Help
Login
Login
Home » Discuss » Journals » geekgrrl Donate to DU
Advertise Liberally! The Liberal Blog Advertising Network
Advertise on more than 70 progressive blogs!
geekgrrl's Journal
Posted by geekgrrl in General Discussion
Sat Jan 15th 2011, 11:55 AM
After two huge arguments online with people about Maine's Governor LePage's comments on the NAACP, immigration, and Sarah Palin's violent language, I feel like I want to stay off the internet completely. Instead I'm coming to the DU with a hunch. What these people miss is a sociological imagination.

I teach in my intro to sociology class about C. Wright Mills' "the sociological imagination". I find myself wishing I could teach a huge, nation-wide sociology class these days.

"The sociological imagination is the ability to recognize the relationship between large-scale social forces and the actions of individuals. It includes both the capacity to see relationships between individual biographies and historical change, and the capacity to see how social causation operates in societies." (wikipedia)

To have a sociological imagination is to put yourself in someone else's shoes-- to see the world from other people's perspectives. It's a gift, a gift that I see many people here on the DU have.

Some examples of how conservatives lack a Sociological Imagination:

** The Tuscan, Arizona shooting:
- The individualist logic: The guy must be mentally ill. His politics don't matter. The fact that there have been violent threats against politicians who support healthcare reform doesn't matter. The fact that we have public figures who use gun crosshairs to target specific politicians, and use violent language to pander to their pro-gun supporters doesn't matter. The context (political and cultural) doesn't matter. It's individual. We can chalk it up to that and criticize anyone who says otherwise as trying to make a mountain out of a molehill.
- A sociological approach: The political and cultural context matter. The violent rhetoric used by public figures creates an environment where violence is an answer to problems. Yes, the individual matters, but the individual's violent actions are shaped by outside political and cultural forces.

** Welfare dependency is a major cause of our govt/budget problems:
- The individualist logic: People should pull themselves up by their bootstraps. Only people who FAIL to find work, support their families etc. need welfare and thus they don't deserve it. People depend on public assistance too much and want to milk the system. They don't need facts and figures to back this up, because there is always the individual case of someone with a big screen TV and a wii to "prove" that people milk welfare.
- A sociological approach: Nearly everyone at some point in their lives is going to need help-- is going to need public support. When our economy is bad, more people are going to need it. People who need help are often elderly or have medical problems-- they are not failures. We all need a social support system.

** Immigration is ruining the country:
- The individualist logic: People move here to milk the system.
- The sociological approach: People move here from other countries in crisis, and they come here for a better life and more opportunities. Historically, we all have immigrant roots and our relatives moved here for the same reasons. Imagine why you might want a better life for your family, and what you would do if you lived in a country where that wasn't possible? Imagine your early immigrant relatives and how hard they struggled when they got here. What would that have been like for them?

** Special interests are corrupting politics: (LePage telling the NAACP to "kiss my butt")
- The individualist logic: We're all equal and thus there are no differences between us. Anyone who points out differences is reverse racist/sexist/homophobic. We all have equal opportunities to pull ourselves up by our bootstraps, and if any one group is living in more poverty etc. it's because they choose to live that way. They're choice, not our problem.
- The sociological approach: Some groups of people still experience discrimination at many levels (institutional, individual etc.) and because of that, we need to point out these inequalities in order to understand them, address them, and fix them. Ignoring factual differences doesn't make them go away, it makes them WORSE.

And the list could go on and on...

This is why it's impossible to argue with conservatives-- their viewpoint is SO individualistic ("well I know someone who is here illegally for food stamps blah blah blah") that they miss THE BIG PICTURE and how interconnected we all are. They don't bother putting themselves in someone else's shoes or thinking from someone else's perspective. How sad, and I wonder how we can get people to change?
Read entry | Discuss (17 comments) | Recommend (+27 votes)
Posted by geekgrrl in General Discussion (1/22-2007 thru 12/14/2010)
Sun Mar 21st 2010, 01:15 PM
I hope this is appropriate for the DU. I am heartbroken that a wonderful family that just hasn't ever gotten a break, is also now dealing with loosing everything they own and being homeless.

I’ve been L's Big Brothers Big Sisters “big sister” for 5+ years. She's a wonderful, hard working kid, on her way to being the first person in her family to graduate from high school (and eventually to go to college!) On March 17, 2010, the family lost everything they owned in a house fire. Fortunately my little sister and most of her siblings were in school, and no one was hurt. Her mother is single, and disabled, and has dealt with a lot of health problems while raising 7 children. Over the years I’ve known them, she has managed to make their home a comfortable, wonderful place, despite living on a very limited income (completely on public assistance). The fire was a total loss, and the Red Cross is only able to help them with temporary housing and basic supplies.

Anything you can donate, no matter how little, will be very appreciated. I plan to collect donations and give the cash to the family to use however they need too. They might also need other donations (computer, clothes, school supplies, books etc.) but I thought that cash would be the most useful thing for them right now.

Here's a news story about the fire: http://www.nbc15.com/home/headlines/881941...

https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=...

thank you so much for anything you can donate! Peace and blessings!
Read entry | Discuss (6 comments) | Recommend (+13 votes)
Posted by geekgrrl in General Discussion: Presidential (Through Nov 2009)
Fri Nov 07th 2008, 01:09 PM
A colleague of mine (a sociologist) is collecting narrative reactions to the election of Obama. I think this is such a wonderful idea-- I've been hoping for some kind of compilation of the kinds of stories I've been reading here on the DU. You know, the ones that bring tears to all of our eyes.

Here's what she's looking for-- and contact info is at the end:

Hi all

I'm working on a project to collect "immediate narratives" of the incredibly diverse responses to this historic election. I am truly moved on many levels by these responses -- the ones coming from you all, from colleagues and friends, from folks in the grocery store. Many of these responses have been emotional, many of them have been doubtful, many of them have been intellectual, and a few have been angry. But I have rarely seen such an immediate and powerful response to an election, including 2004, when I think many of us were too depressed to feel anything else deeply. This is fascinating to me.

Given this, I write to ask you to send me your responses.I encourage you to write from a personal perspective, a political perspective, a sociological perspective, a feminist perspective, a race perspective -- whatever suits you. I suspect most people receiving this initial email are Obama supporters, but I know for a fact that not all are, and that's fine. This is not intended to be an Obama love-fest, it is intended to be honest, so please feel free to share your love, your hopes, your fears, whatever. I ask for no more than 1500 words, though as few as 1 word is fine. Please be honest in this moment -- or try to recall your response when the announcement was made. But I'm really looking for your immediate, right-now-this-is-what-I-think/feel response.

If you are willing to help me out, please send me your "response" (which can take any form, really -- I've already received an unsolicited poem from a friend in FL, who has agreed to be included) and the following information:

Your name (for my records)
Any affiliation you would like noted -- professional, political, activist, religious, whatever is important to you
Your city, state, province, etc.
a brief bio (please no more than 20 words, but please id yourself however YOU want).

I'd like to have a good collection before Thanksgiving -- the sooner the better, before we all begin to evolve away from the immediate moment. This should only take you a moment if you're willing to share, no research required!

Thanks for considering and let me know if you have questions or concerns!

Barb


Barbara Gurr
Sociology Department/Women's Studies Program
University of Connecticut, Storrs
860-486-2256
barbara.gurr@uconn.edu
Read entry | Discuss (1 comments) | Recommend (+3 votes)
Greatest Threads
The ten most recommended threads posted on the Democratic Underground Discussion Forums in the last 24 hours.
StarStar
Star
Visitor Tools
Use the tools below to keep track of updates to this Journal.
Random Journal
Random Journal
 
Home  |  Discussion Forums  |  Journals  |  Campaigns  |  Links  |  Store  |  Donate
About DU  |  Contact Us  |  Privacy Policy
Got a message for Democratic Underground? Click here to send us a message.