The War Against The Poor: The Underclass And Antipoverty Policy

Awards:   Winner of Choice Magazine Outstanding Reference/Academic Book Award 1996 Winner of Choice Magazine Outstanding Reference/Academic Book Award 1996.
Author:   Herbert J. Gans
Publisher:   Basic Books
ISBN:  

9780465019915


Pages:   208
Publication Date:   28 June 1996
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
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The War Against The Poor: The Underclass And Antipoverty Policy


Awards

  • Winner of Choice Magazine Outstanding Reference/Academic Book Award 1996
  • Winner of Choice Magazine Outstanding Reference/Academic Book Award 1996.

Overview

In his withering dissection of the origins and misuse of the term underclass"" to stereotype and stigmatize the poor, Herbert J. Gans shows how this ubiquitous label has relegated a wide variety of people, welfare recipients, the working poor, teenage mothers, drug addicts, the homeless, and others, to a single condemned class, feared and despised by the rest of society. Probing the deep psychological, social, and political reasons why Americans seek to indict millions of poor citizens as undeserving,"" Gans calls for a cease-fire in the undeclared war against the poor. He concludes with a set of innovative, job-centred policy proposals and a multifaceted educational plan to stop the endless flow of new recruits into America's untouchable caste.

Full Product Details

Author:   Herbert J. Gans
Publisher:   Basic Books
Imprint:   Basic Books
Dimensions:   Width: 12.70cm , Height: 1.50cm , Length: 20.30cm
Weight:   0.228kg
ISBN:  

9780465019915


ISBN 10:   0465019919
Pages:   208
Publication Date:   28 June 1996
Audience:   General/trade ,  General
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Manufactured on demand   Availability explained
We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier.

Table of Contents

Labeling the Poor; The Invention of the Underclass Label; The Dangers of Underclass and Other Labels; The Undeservingness of the Poor; Policies Against Poverty and Undeservingness; Joblessness and Antipoverty Policy in the Twenty-first Century

Reviews

Sociologist Gans (Columbia; Middle American Individualism, 1988, etc.) deconstructs the pejorative label underclass and offers some pie-in-the-sky proposals for eliminating poverty in America. According to Gans, since 1980 a diverse cross-section of poor Americans have been lumped together as the underclass and thus banished from mainstream society. Welfare recipients, school dropouts, panhandlers, drug addicts, street criminals, illegal immigrants, and assorted others have all been shoved under the derogatory umbrella label, which has become a behavioral term connoting moral deficiencies [and] bad values. Gans traces the word underclass to a brief passage in a 1963 book by Gunnar Myrdal that described the economic victims of deindustrialization. Gans then shows how the word was transformed into a stigma by a succession of journalists and social scientists who assumed from the start that the underclass was black. The author's deconstruction of the popular misnomer is instructive; nevertheless, he stops short of full-scale analysis, maintaining that society is not a text. Instead, his interest here is in how the popularization of the behavioral label underclass has resulted in certain political actions (such as current efforts to eliminate welfare as a means of eliminating morally suspect welfare dependency) and in certain popular trends (such as the proliferation of racist talk radio and books like The Bell Curve). The book's second section is an academic's wish list for an antipoverty program that would assimilate the underclass into American society: Gans favors massive job creation by private industry plus government-sponsored public works, drastic work-sharing, and value-added taxes, as well as a variety of nebulous measures, such as the separation of work from income through a minimum income guarantee and a yet-to-be-invented method for media to debunk class stereotypes. Gans's analysis of the popular code word reads like a fascinating footnote; the rest of the book is familiar going. (Kirkus Reviews)


Author Information

Herbert J. Gans, author of Levittowners and The Urban Villagers, is professor of sociology at Columbia University and the former president of the American Sociological Association.

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