Empathy and Socio-Historical Accounts

What is the place of subjectivity in sociological study? More or less, I found myself newly informed by the Gregory reading (especially in regards to the statement made on the stereotypical views of impoverished groups as being disorganized and helpless), however I also found myself intensely distrustful of some of the historical accounts—not because I don’t think any of these issues didn’t happen, far from it, but because of the admittance of the author on the tilt he was putting on it. Objectivity is impossible, I get that—the golden objective standard for journalism is fast becoming a funny thing people used to strive for, and the “impartial observer” is little more than a myth—but the acknowledgement of recolored history made me more skeptical than I feel I should have been for any point of the author’s to get through. “While doing my fieldwork,” Gregory writes, “it quickly became apparent that activists continually recollected and reworded Corona’s history to provide meaning and context, as well as narrative authority, to interpretations of contemporary social conditions.” (14) Then, later, “If my writing of this history has been skewed by the ways in which activists selectively reuse the past, it has also been shaped by my own, equally particular, theoretical and political commitments.” (15) The problem I find with these quotes is more or less the problem that’s apparent in Govan’s action of “[dismissing] decades of people and events with an impatient wave of his hand,” and the further problem of the proliferation of the stereotype of the welfare queen (which seems to be more or less the same action but with the blinders covering up different angles)—the complexity goes unrealized and, as such, the account becomes biased in a way that’s too blatant for the role of the study of how people work. As in the Kleniewski readings, there’s an attempt to simplify trends which leads to an impossibility to find what’s seemingly true: “Thus, the ecologists’ search for a model to describe ‘The City’ was frustrated by the complexity of actual cities.” (27) The problem here doesn’t seem so much to be one of some baseless redirection but of an exchange of sympathy—away from accounts that might might complicate the sympathy and a redrawing of lines to make sympathy easier. This seems to me to be a failure of empathy. But the problem then becomes: if objectivity is impossible, and the acknowledgement of directed subjectivity seems untrustworthy, how can empathy be projected more boldly into every account, and how can complexity be more truly realized? How do you balance the need for truth to systems with the need for your point about the systems to get across?

—Kyle

Reading Response 1

As a previous student of sociology, I understood much of what these authors were discussing and the frameworks they mentioned. It was really interesting to read about different theories and paradigms surrounding urban sociology – especially because it’s been over a year since I’ve taken a class in sociology. I believe that structure is important to take into account when considering society, so to read both these authors analyzing 1) urbanization and 2) black political identity (which are two increasingly important concepts) through a structural lens was super insightful.

Urbanization is a process that started with the Industrial Revolution and hasn’t stopped; considering that a majority of the world’s population lives in cities (UN) it is absolutely vital that we understand the urban environment. I mean this speaking ecologically, politically, economically, and historically. So the first reading, I believe, was useful for students beginning to view the urban environment in a scholarly fashion.

I was (quite unabashedly) more interested in the second reading, however. In my sociology class we spent a lot of time discussing Moynihan and the Culture of Poverty. I spent so much time critiquing this concept my first semester that when I read the Black Corona piece, I immediately accepted his argument. It is ludicrous the way in which black community is portrayed, not only by the media, but by scholars as well. The fact that black Americans are so acutely marginalized, and the richness of their diversity disregarded entirely in favor of false, insidious stereotypes, leaves no question as to why riots like Ferguson happen. Somethin’s gotta give.

Questions:

1) Which perspective is more applicable to New York City as it is today? What are the merits to each?

2) What shapes the way mainstream society views the black community? What are the legacies that led to this? How can this be changed?