A Poverty
of the Mind By Harry Holzer, an
economist at His conclusions are shared by scholars like
Ronald B. Mincy of Nor have studies explained why, if someone
cannot get a job, he turns to crime and drug abuse. One does not imply the
other. Joblessness is rampant in Latin America and What has happened, I think, is that the
economic boom years of the 90's and one of the most successful policy
initiatives in memory -- welfare reform -- have made
it impossible to ignore the effects of culture. The One oft-repeated excuse for the failure of
black Americans to take these jobs -- that they did not offer a living wage
-- turned out to be irrelevant. The sociologist Roger Waldinger
of the University of California at Los Angeles, for example, has shown that
in New York such jobs offered an opportunity to the chronically unemployed to
join the market and to acquire basic work skills that they later transferred
to better jobs, but that the takers were predominantly immigrants. Why have
academics been so allergic to cultural explanations? Until the recent rise of
behavioral economics, most economists have simply not taken non-market forces
seriously. But what about the sociologists and other social scientists who
ought to have known better? Three gross misconceptions about culture explain
the neglect. First is the pervasive idea that cultural
explanations inherently blame the
victim; that they focus on internal behavioral factors and, as such, hold
people responsible for their poverty, rather than putting the onus on their
deprived environment. (It hasn't helped that many conservatives do actually
put forth this view.) But this argument is utterly bogus. To hold someone
responsible for his behavior is not to exclude any recognition of the
environmental factors that may have induced the problematic behavior in the
first place. Many victims of child abuse end up behaving in self-destructive
ways; to point out the link between their behavior and the destructive acts
is in no way to deny the causal role of their earlier victimization and the
need to address it. Likewise, a cultural explanation of black
male self-destructiveness addresses not simply the immediate connection
between their attitudes and behavior and the undesired outcomes, but explores
the origins and changing nature of these attitudes, perhaps over generations,
in their brutalized past. It is impossible to understand the predatory
sexuality and irresponsible fathering behavior of young black men without
going back deep into their collective past. Second, it is often assumed that
cultural explanations are wholly deterministic, leaving no room for human
agency. This, too, is nonsense. Modern students of culture have long shown
that while it partly determines behavior, it also enables people to change
behavior. People use their culture as
a frame for understanding their world, and as a resource to do much of
what they want. The same cultural patterns can frame different kinds of
behavior, and by failing to explore culture at any depth, analysts miss a
great opportunity to re-frame attitudes in a way that encourages desirable
behavior and outcomes. Third, it is often assumed that cultural patterns cannot change --
the old ''cake of custom'' saw. This too is nonsense. Indeed, cultural
patterns are often easier to change than the economic factors favored by
policy analysts, and American history offers numerous examples. My favorite
is Jim Crow, that deeply entrenched set of cultural
and institutional practices built up over four centuries of racist domination
and exclusion of blacks by whites in the South. Nothing could have been more
cultural than that. And yet So what are some of the cultural factors
that explain the sorry state of young black men? They aren't always obvious.
Sociological investigation has found, in fact, that one popular explanation
-- that black children who do well are derided by fellow blacks for ''acting
white'' -- turns out to be largely false, except for those attending a
minority of mixed-race schools. An anecdote helps explain why: Several years
ago, one of my students went back to her high school to find out why it was
that almost all the black girls graduated and went to college whereas nearly
all the black boys either failed to graduate or did not go on to college.
Distressingly, she found that all the black boys knew the consequences of not
graduating and going on to college (''We're not stupid!'' they told her
indignantly). SO why were they flunking out? Their candid answer was that
what sociologists call the ''cool-pose culture'' of young black men was
simply too gratifying to give up. For these young men, it was almost like a
drug, hanging out on the street after school, shopping and dressing sharply,
sexual conquests, party drugs, hip-hop music and culture, the fact that
almost all the superstar athletes and a great many of the nation's best
entertainers were black. Not only was living this subculture
immensely fulfilling, the boys said, it also brought them a great deal of
respect from white youths. This also explains the otherwise puzzling finding
by social psychologists that young black men and women tend to have the
highest levels of self-esteem of all ethnic groups, and that their self-image
is independent of how badly they were doing in school. I call this the
Dionysian trap for young black men. The important thing to note about the
subculture that ensnares them is that it is not disconnected from the
mainstream culture. To the contrary, it has powerful support from some of For young black men, however, that culture
is all there is -- or so they think. Sadly, their complete engagement in this
part of the American cultural mainstream, which they created and which feeds
their pride and self-respect, is a major factor in their disconnection from
the socioeconomic mainstream. Of course, such attitudes explain only a part
of the problem. In academia, we need a new, multidisciplinary approach toward
understanding what makes young black men behave so self-destructively.
Collecting transcripts of their views and rationalizations is a useful first
step, but won't help nearly as much as the recent rash of
scholars with tape-recorders seem to think. Getting the facts straight
is important, but for decades we have been overwhelmed with statistics on
black youths, and running more statistical regressions is beginning to
approach the point of diminishing returns to knowledge. The tragedy unfolding
in our inner cities is a time-slice of a deep historical process that runs
far back through the cataracts and deluge of our racist past. Most black
Americans have by now, miraculously, escaped its consequences. The
disconnected fifth languishing in the ghettos is the remains. Too much is at
stake for us to fail to understand the plight of these young men. For them,
and for the rest of us. |
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