The “Shame” Culture Of Poverty- Down In
The Base Of Society Life Ain’t Pretty
By Josh Breslin
Recently in reviewing Frank McCourt’s
memoir of his childhood in Ireland, “Angela’s Ashes”, I noted that McCourt’s
story was my story. I went on to explain that although time, geography, family
composition and other factors were different the story he tells of the
impoverished circumstances of his growing up “shanty” in Limerick, Ireland,
taking all proportions into consideration, was amazingly similar to those I
faced growing up “shanty” in a Boston, Massachusetts suburb a generation later.
The commonality? I would argue that down at the base of modern industrial
society, down at that place where the working poor meets what Karl Marx called
the lumpen proletariat the sheer fact of scarcity drives life very close to the
bone. Poverty hurts, and hurts in more ways than are apparent to the eye. No
Dorothea Lange photograph can find that place.
I also mentioned in that McCourt review
that the dreams that came of age in that Limerick childhood neighborhood, such
as they were, were small dreams. I immediately picked up on his references to
what constituted “respectability” in that milieu- getting off the “dole” and
getting a low-level governmental civil service job that after thirty some years
would turn into a state pension in order to comfort oneself and one’s love ones
in old age. Hell, not even a gold watch for meritorious service for God’s sake.
That, my friends, is a small dream by anybody’s standard but I am sure that any
reader who grew up in a working poor home in America in the last couple of
generations knows from where I speak. I can hear my mother’s voice urging me on
to such a course as I have just described. Escaping that fate was a near thing
though. The crushing out of big dreams for the working poor may not be the
final indictment of the capitalist system down at the base but it certainly
will do for starters.
In the recent past one of the
unintended consequences of trying to recount my roots through contacting
members of my high school class has been the release of a flood of memories
from those bleak days of childhood that I had placed (or thought I had) way,
way on the back burner of my brain. A couple of year ago I did a series of
stories, “Tales From The ‘Hood,” on some of those earlier recalled incidents.
Frank McCourt’s recounting of some of the incidents of his bedraggled
upbringing brought other incidents back to me. In “Angela’s Ashes” he mentioned
how he had to wear the same shirt through thick and thin. As nightwear, school
wear, every wear. I remember my own scanty wardrobe and recounted in one of
those stories in the series, “A Coming Of Age Story”, about ripping up the
bottoms of a pair of precious pants for a square dance demonstration in order
to ‘impress’ a girl that I was smitten with in elementary school. I caught holy
hell for that (and missed my big chance with the youthful “femme fatale” as
well-oh memory).
I have related elsewhere in discussing
my high school experiences in that series that I did a couple of years ago at
the request of one of my high school classmates, that one of the hardships of
high school was (and is) the need , recognized or not, to be “in”. One of the
ways to be “in”, at least for a guy in my post-World War II generation, the
“Generation of ’68,” and the first generation to have some disposable income in
hand was to have cool clothes, a cool car, and a cool girlfriend. “Cool”, you
get it, right? Therefore the way to be the dreaded “out” is….well, you know
that answer. One way not to be cool was to wear hand-me-downs from an older
brother. Or to wear oddly colored or designed clothes. This is where not having
enough of life’s goods hurts. Being doled out a couple of new sets of duds a
year was not enough to break my social isolation from the “cool guys”. I
remember the routine-new clothes for the start of the school year and then at
Easter. Cheap stuff too, from some Wal-Mart-type store of the day.
All of this may be silly, in fact is
silly in the great scale of things. But those drummed-in small dreams, that
non-existent access to those always scarce “cool” items, those missed
opportunities by not being ‘right’ added up. All of this created a ‘world’
where crime, petty and large, seemed respectable as an alternative (a course
that my own brothers followed), where the closeness of neighbors is suffocating
and where the vaunted “neighborhood community” is more like something out of “the
night of the long knives”. If, as Thomas Hobbes postulated in his political
works, especially "Leviathan", in the 17th century, life is “nasty,
short and brutish” then those factors are magnified many times over down at the
base.
Contrary to Hobbes, however, the way forward is through more
social solidarity, not more guards at the doors of the rich. All of this by way
of saying in the 21st century we need more social solidarity not less more than
ever. As I stated once in a commentary titled, “Brother, Can You Spare A Dime?,”
one of the only virtues of growing up on the wrong side of the tracks among the
working poor is that I am personally inured to the vicissitudes of the
gyrations of the world capitalist economy. Hard times growing up were the only
times. But many of my brothers and sisters are not so inured. For them I fight
for the social solidarity of the future. In that future we may not be able to
eliminate shame as an emotion but we can put a very big dent in the class-driven
aspect of it.
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