Wednesday, December 7, 2011

Inequalities in Gendered Work


Lauren Berg
WGS 410
Final Essays
Inequalities in Gendered Work
Global economics, politics and corporate structures have a sizable impact on the ways in which women make an income. These structures, reinforced with sexism, have caused gender specific occupations and significant numbers of female migrant workers. The general population of the world may see women choosing certain occupations out of their own free will, but because of a number of factors it has become more of a necessity than a choice for them to work in the fields in which they do. Large numbers of women are being hard-pressed into working in the industries of domestic labor, childcare, clothing production and many other fields. These occupations are overlooked by many as just some bad jobs, or jobs made for women; people don’t realize the unjust conditions in which the workers are forced to comply with. Throughout this paper I will discuss these injustices and explain how they are interconnected to certain structures and ideologies.
Almost every job in the entire global workforce is gendered. For instance, the female population dominates positions in the cleaning industry, the care industry, agriculture, nursing, and clothing production. Men dominate positions such as CEOs, engineers, electricians, and many other high paying fields. The wage gap between men and women has resulted in women being more dependent on males. When males are not supportive to their families, women are often are forced to fend for their entire family with whatever sort of work is accessible to them.
Some countries value women less than others. For example, Chinese culture places much superiority on the male population. The film China Blue gave an example of a family with a daughter and son who were accepted into universities at the same time. The parents could only afford to send one of their children to school so they choose the son. They chose the son because that is what is expected in their culture and he would be more capable of supporting the family after he graduates than the daughter. Then the daughter had to migrate to a nearby city to work in a factory making jeans. While she endured harsh work conditions, her brother became educated and found a quality career. It is a more common occurrence in modern times for women to have to migrate and leave behind their families for bad jobs.
The demand for domestic labor has been rising throughout the global north. There are several reasons for this phenomenon. There are pronounced economic reasons, but it is argued that the primary and often unseen reason for this change is the status symbol that having an employee gives to a person (Ehrenreich & Hochschild, 2002). It is a symbol of wealth and status to have an employee do the household chores. Another cause is that “the wealthy parts of the world are running short on precious emotional and sexual resources and have had to turn to poorer regions for fresh supplies” (Ehrenreich & Hochschild, 2002). With most families earning a dual income, families do not have enough time to always be caring for the children, keeping the house in order, and meeting spouses’ sexual needs.
            With a lack of inexpensive laborers in the global north and a surplus of women in need of money in the global south, a large amount of women migrate for work. Most of them are expecting to find a decent job, but after they migrate they find that there are few available other than in the cleaning, care, and sex industries. Within the privacy of the employers home, domestic workers are often subject to abuse, degradation and humiliation. It is a common trend for the identification papers of the workers to be confiscated by the employer to prevent them from fleeing. If the worker had signed a contract before their migration, it is usually broken and they are often doing completely different jobs than they had been promised. They work with very low wedges and long hours. In the book Globalization & Militarism, Enloe states that “one of our newest feminist revelation is that one cannot explain why the international system works the way it does without taking woman’s lives seriously”.
The best ways in which we can correct these inequalities is by empowering women through education, micro-finance programs, and the creation and enforcement of new laws (Kristof & WuDunn, 2010). None of these solutions come easily, but every persons educated advocacy can make a difference. There are many organizations that are attempting to gain equality for women, but not every organization is effective and change will be a slow process.
            Throughout the world, the global economy, political world, and gender inequality are causing women to compromise their abilities and desires to work in the fields in which they choose. They are being coerced into positions that may cause physical or emotional trauma, that may force them to migrate away from their families, and cause them to suffer through horrible working conditions with low pay. These are problems of much dismay, and a call of attention is needed. Empowering women is the solution to correct these gender inequalities. 

Monday, December 5, 2011

Sidewalk: Filling in the Cracks


Lauren Berg
SOC 310
Final Essay
Sidewalk:
Filling in the Cracks

            In recent decades there has been an ever-increasing number of homeless people in the United States. There are a large number of stereotypes, stigmas, and irrationalities towards the homeless population. In recent times, social research is in greater need than ever before. In his book Sidewalk, Duneier takes his reader into his research of the vendors and the homeless people on the sidewalk of 6th and Greenwich Avenue of New York City.
            Duneier draws on many important points that have to do with race, class, status, habits, and stereotypes. He described in his book how the people of the “sidewalk” did not end up there simply by coincidence or because of lack of ambition and effort. There are a series of social reasons that have caused them to end up where they are.
            As he describes it, their downfall to living and/or working on the streets typically is the initial result of racism in the job market and discouraging economic prospects. Without much hope for the future, drugs and alcohol are often used to numb their woes. Because a lack of income, they often lose their homes and are forced to live on the street. After a person gets to that stage of being a homeless drug user, it is nearly impossible for them to reverse the cycle. Many are unable to obtain jobs in the formal economy and are frowned upon by society, especially if they have been sent to jail for drug usage. For many of them, their best opportunity is to build a life in informal market community. There are exceptions to this process though, such as how some people make a choice to be homeless and/or make their living on the informal market. Working as a vendor gives many a sense of purpose and moral code to earn their own living; and some choose to live in a way that best facilitates their source of income.
            Many lawmakers have tried the approach of eliminating the homeless population and the informal market. They have attempted to do so in a variety of ways, for example when flyers were handed out in the Pennsylvania Station to not give money to the panhandlers because it “keeps them homeless”. Another example from the book is when all the unnecessary nooks and crannies were of Pennsylvania Station made inaccessible, so that homeless people no longer had space to rest or do their business; this eventually led to the migration of homeless population to where they currently are, according to Duneier, in the Greenwich Village. There were laws created to ban vendors from selling on the streets, but eventually there was an exception made that vending written material was allowed. The lawmakers can attempt to get people off the streets and into social services, and they can attempt to end the informal market, but their attempts will always be far from complete success.
            The sub-society of Greenwich Village is complex and ever changing. Duneier used ethnographic approaches and methods to analyze the Greenwich Village life. Many of his methods are similar to those of sociological theorists. In this essay I will compare and analyze Duneier’s observations and theories with those of the sociological theorists Erving Goffman, Karl Marx, and Herbert Mead.
            The Sidewalk can be interpreted using several of Goffman’s theories. Symbolic interactionism is a theory that puts emphasis on micro-scale interaction to determine meaning of behaviors and social systems. Goffman manipulated this definition a little, giving it more complexity, detail, and also by developing a theoretical process in which groups and societies are formed. His theoretical process shows that symbols and social meaning, which allow for human beings’ unique capacity for thought, are not only shaped through human interactions but also allow for interaction and action. One such interaction that allows for symbols and meanings to be modified is with oneself. Groups and societies are then made up of patterns of interaction and action.
            When Goffman’s theory of symbolic interactionism is applied to the “people of the sidewalk” in Duneier’s book, it helps us gain understanding of the complex structure of their community. Being a part of the sidewalk community has helped many people face and overcome their problems. The people of this community provide support, mentorship, information, and a means of survival to one another. As Duneier states, becoming part of the sidewalk is “becoming part of the lifeline, the web of interactions that constitutes the ongoing life of the sidewalk”. The lifeline of the sidewalk exists because people continue to play their roles as mentors, public characters, and vendors. Although much of society may not understand how selling things such as books and magazines can be fulfilling, others have found it fulfilling to earn an honest living.
            The people of the sidewalk communicate and converse with one another, and while doing so they may change their views on many meanings and symbols of things that they use in their daily life. Black books, which are books written about blacks or by blacks, are important symbols to many people in the community. Hakim, who is seen as a mentor in the community, explained to a young man of the neighborhood that black books teach “you about yourself and how white people look at you. It teaches you stuff that white people don’t teach you”.  Black books can symbolize knowledge of ones culture, a tool to find self-identity, or black pride.
            Mentors of the sidewalk help encourage others to succeed, do better in life and in general strive for self-betterment.  Ultimately everyone on the sidewalk has something in common; they are all on the sidewalk and just trying to survive and satisfy their own needs and their family’s needs. According to the symbolic interaction theory, the interactions of people of the sidewalk together form the community that they are today.
            Related to symbolic interactionism is another one of Goffman’s theories that can be applied to Sidewalk. Dramaturgy is a theoretical metaphor in which social life and social interaction are related to a dramatic performance. There are several aspects of this theory that I will describe in the following sentences.  The self is a construction of interaction and performance. The front stage and the back stage are the locations in which a performance is or is not put on. Impression management is how the self protects against unexpected action. Idealization is used when the actors want to present themselves in a way, which will fit the expectations of their audience. These aspects of dramaturgy can all be seen within Duneier’s Sidewalk.
            One of the largest faults Duneier’s ethnographic methods of sociological research in Sidewalk can be explained using Goffman’s theory of dramaturgy. The un-housed population is almost always on the front stage, as they are almost always in the view of the public’s eyes. Most people try to use idealized behavior when others are around, but the un-housed are often forced to have “indecent” public behavior, such as urinate or change a baby’s diaper on the sidewalk. When such acts are performed it can ruin a persons public reputation, and damage potential opportunities. Duneier also mentions that during many of his interviews and conversations with the people of Greenwich Village, idealization had an impact. In several instances people lied to Duneier. A possible reason for this reaction is that they wanted to believe they were better off and had more prospects than they actually did. Another possibility is that they felt a need to make their life sound better than it is to impress Duneier and idealize themselves. There are several possible explanations but there is no way to know for sure which one is accurate.
             According to Goffman’s theory, the self is a product of interaction, “a dramatic effect arising… from a scene that is presented” (Goffman, 2011).  In Goffman’s view the selves of the people of Greenwich Village are shaped by the interactions they have with one another and the public, it is a group process. This coincides with Marx’s view of the self in some ways, such as how the self is a product of interaction. On the other hand, it is in opposition to Mark’s view because as Marx believed that the self was more a product of perceptions than of group processes.
            The first of Marx’s theories that I will discuss is money in bourgeois society. The theory states that one’s individuality is not determined by their own characteristics or capacities, but the power of money to transform what one wants into what one is. Thus money not only affords a person commodities, but also characteristics such as status, beauty, talent, honesty, or the lack there of.
            Using Marx’s theory of money in bourgeois society to analyze the behaviors and the stereotypes that citizens have against the black lower-class men of Greenwich Village, I have drawn several conclusions. The Romps are a lower-class white family who live down the street from the vendors every December to sell Christmas trees. When they first came there to sell trees they were immediately accepted and trusted by people living in the general area. They were given the keys to several apartments and houses and told to use them to use their bathrooms when they need to. They were treated exponentially better than any of the black families were, and hardly had to work to gain that trust. The African American families of the neighborhood most likely did not receive such support from society because of their race. It is true that blacks are more feared in American society than whites are (Duneier, 1999), which I believe is a result of their general lower economic class. Because they tend to have less economic opportunities than whites, they commit more robberies and other such petty crimes. This has built a stereotype that the African American population is not very trust worthy. Therefore, it was ultimately because African Americans lack of money that the Romps were immediately trusted by the general population, and none of the black families were.

            Another of Marx’s theories can help one gain a better understanding of why the people of Greenwich Village came to be un-housed and/or came to work on the informal market. Marx has a strong theory of economics, in which he explains his view on capitalism. His theory states that capitalism is very exploitative to the working class. The owners of successful business and means of production benefit from capitalism, but there are several drawbacks to capitalism. Marx wrote that capitalism causes the working class to suffer from not realizing their full human capacity of creativity, causes several forms of alienation, it leads to monopoly, and general exploitation of the middle and lower classes. His theory on the relationship between property ownership and labor are also relevant to Greenwich Village, as it explains why the people of the “sidewalk”, once, un-housed, it is very rare for them to ever economically prosper to the extent in which the upper class does.
            Although Duneier did not individually state each of the reasons why the people of the “sidewalk” are not working in the formal market, he did explain that in general it was because of exploitation. The exploitation of the black race in the work force may be the primary reason, but this is also interlinked with the lower class in general. Although Marx did not have much to say on the subject of race, it is true that the lower class of America is dominated by people of color because of racism in the workforce. The average African American man earns only 72 percent of the average white man (Light, 2011). It is because of this exploitation in the workforce that many of the men of the sidewalk community did not have good jobs or job security, and once they lost their jobs they had little economic prospects. The increase in machinery and technology has also caused a decrease in the number of jobs and job security for the lower class, which coincides with Marx in the Communist Manifesto. This is how the sidewalks have come to be dominated by African Americans.
            Duneier explains that the vendors enjoy the sense of freedom that the informal market gives them. This is partially because they like making an honest living rather than the alternative, but I believe that this may be because they enjoy using their creative potential. Marx believed that working in a structured industry of the formal economy causes the worker to feel alienated. The vendors on 6th avenue choose their work and how they do it, so they do not become alienated from their work like those of the formal market often do. They are not alienated from their product, because they are the ones who set the price and sell it to the consumer. Most of them have many conversations and friendships with the other workers of the area, and therefore are not alienated from one another. The worker of the informal market rarely becomes alienated from their self, because most of them feel comfortable in the Greenwich community, and to many of them it is their home, so they must feel comfortable there.
            One of Herbert Mead’s most prominent theories is called pragmatism. Unlike Goffman or Marx theories discussed in this paper, with his pragmatism theory, Mead developed a way of observing people and communities.  He states that “ideas are not copies of external objects, but truth is a form of action” (Mead, 2001). He believes that in order to understand social actors, we must understand them based on what they actually do. Duneier follows the same pragmatic approach with his ethnographic methods.
            Duneier’s methods of observation seem very accurate. He made many observations of his subjects, using different methods, over a long period of time. His most programmatic approach was the most commonly used in his writing; this is when he joined his subjects on the streets. He got to know them well and observe their behavior over a long period of time. This approach seemed to be unflawed to me, in combination with his other data collecting methods and his awareness of the possible flaws of the methods. If Duneier did not combine pragmatism with other forms of observation, he would not have gained nearly as much important data. Although with working with the other forms of data collections he had to be careful to execute this methods correctly, because it would be easy to have errors. It was very necessary for him to do his observations over a long period of time, to keep his tape recorder with him while observing to prevent obscuring of the data, and to also interview his subjects. It was also essential that he assess his interviews for accuracy.
            Another notion of Mead’s that can be seen within Sidewalk is the generalized other. This notion is in reference to an attitude and expectations of a group to each individual. To be a member of this group it is required that one understands the attitudes of the group. This group of people give to an individual their unity of self. Mead argues that is essential to find that understanding because the complete self is social and part of a group.
            The Greenwich Village provides many people with these essential requirements to having a complete self. All the roles that people play in the sub-society of Greenwich Village, such as vendor, panhandler, mentor and public character, work together to form a community. They all share common attitudes and have certain expectations. In order for Duneier to accurately observe the community, he had to find those attributes and common expectations.  His first acceptance into this social group began when he befriended a vendor named Hakim. Hakim taught Duneier a lot about the community and was a way for Duneier to meet many others of the community, which gave him some entrance into the community. Duneier helped many with their vending and daily work which granted him acceptance to an extent, but to the community he was still part of the generalized other: he was still seen partly as a white, higher class, social researcher. I would presume that the community accepted him more throughout the years that he spent there, although I do not recall Duneier mentioning that.
            Throughout this paper I have analyzed and contrasted Sidewalk with several sociological theories. Using Goffman’s theory of symbolic interactionism I have determined that the Greenwich Village community is more than just people making ends-means but is a lifeline for people, which forms character for individuals. I compared dramaturgy with Duneier’s research methods, and have assessed faults in both systems. Goffman’s and Marx’s theories of the self were compared in an attempt to determine which one works better with the individuals discussed in Sidewalk. Marx’s theory of money was used to determine why a white family in the same neighborhood could gain so much more trust in the community than the black families that have been working for such trust for long periods of time. I concluded that some of Marx’s ideas on capitalism, such as alienation do not apply to the informal market like it does to the formal market; which along with their satisfaction of earning an honest living make the vendors want to keep their job. It was determined that if Duneier only used Mead’s pragmatic approach to observing his subjects that he would not be successful; it takes more than just observation of the actions of an individual to fully understand them. Lastly, I used Mead’s theory of the generalized other to determine a better understanding of how the Greenwich Village community views others.
            I found that out of all the theories that were used, Goffman’s theory of symbolic interactionism was the most relevant and helpful in analyzing Mitchel Duneier’s book the Sidewalk. I feel this theory is superior to the others because it could be looked at from different angles to see several aspects of Sidewalk differently.
            The book Sidewalk filled a spacious void in social research that was much in need of filling. Vendors and un-housed people are an important part of almost every city in the world, and gaining a better understanding of them is essential for lawmakers, government officials and organizations to know how to troubleshoot problems involving them with more success. The use of Goffman’s, Marx’s, and Mead’s theories in analyzing this book was helpful in gaining a deeper understanding of the Greenwich Village sub-culture, and helped me gain a better sociological understanding.

Thursday, November 10, 2011

Half the Sky: Turing Oppression into Opportunity for Women


Lauren Berg
11/10/11
WGS 410
Reading Response
Introduction – Ch. 8

            Despite my lack of knowledge on the subjects, I have always felt a large amount of compassion for women and girls that have been raped, molested, and those who are prostitutes. The book Half the Sky: Turing Oppression into Opportunity for Women started to educate me on the subject of sexual mistreatment and has opened my eyes to a whole different realm of oppression.
The authors of Half the Sky estimate that globally there are 3 million females sex slaves; women and girls whom live under the most miserable conditions, who are the property of their pimp, and who must regularly endure rape, violence and humiliation. There are many activists and organizations trying to help the situation, but sex slavery is still worse than it ever has been. The injustices that go along with prostitution, sexual slavery, as well as many other problems that women have to face are in need of much advocacy and support.
The book has opened my eyes to many problems that I have never thought about very much, such as the importance maternal healthcare. Women                 in many parts of the world receive far too little maternal healthcare. Often there are not any birth complications and maternal healthcare is not needed, but much too often it is needed but not accessed. There is an especially high prevalence of maternal complications with young pregnant girls, many of whom are pregnant because of rape. A significant reason for women seeking maternal healthcare is the lack of access that they have to it; as there is often not a maternal care provider in their location, they can not afford it, or for some reason their culture or family finds it unsuitable for them to get that care. Without maternal healthcare many have to face serious health consequences, which often ruin the live of the mother, child, or both. Maternal healthcare, like many other injustices that women and girls face, need more political representation.
            The solutions to end the oppression of women are even more complex than the problems themselves. The book discusses many attempts to help women in different ways, some of which were successful and some of which were not. Some of the stories that the book told of advocates made me feel frustrated because I know that there is so much more to be done; so many lives to be made better and so many lives to be saved. On the other hand I found some of the stories to be very inspiring. While I read of the great things that these activists are doing, it made me feel inspired to help these women as well. The stories illustrate that just one person with agency can really make a difference and save lives, and I hope to one day really make a difference myself.

Gender and Society


Lauren Berg
SOC 310
Reading Response 3
11/10/11
Gender and Society

            In the article Doing Gender, West and Zimmerman explain the roles of the terms sex, sex category, and gender. In western society we have placed a lot of importance on these terms and built around them many our society’s notions of who should be dominating and who should be submissive. The gender roles discussed in this article give a well defined outline of societies’ gender interactions, which dominate our daily lives and effect just about everything that we do.
            Sex is determined by classifying males and females based on biological criteria. A sex category is “sustained by the socially required identificatory displays that proclaim one's membership in one or the other category”. Membership in a sex category assumes the criteria of that sex, weather the person has the criteria or not. Gender consists of the things we do to make our sex visible and to fit into the society’s standards of that sex category. We are not born knowing how to be a certain gender, it is something that we learn; it is an achieved status.
            To step outside of gender norms is to risk rejection and ridicule, so most people learn to live under society’s gender criteria. As the article implies, “the most normal girl is the tom girl”; knowing how to be a gender is not something that we are born knowing. Being feminine or masculine is a process that is learned over time. We socialize our children as they grow up in a way so that they learn to dress correctly for their gender, talk correctly, and behave in a suitable way. Gender is everywhere, in everything that we do.
            Many people even take gender to an extent of masculinizing and feminizing foods. In that case, I broke a female gender role today by choosing to eat a more masculine meal, a big meaty sandwich, instead of a salad. Some gender norms are more important than others, such as people having the same sex as their sex category. The book says, “we do not think, ‘Most persons with penises are men, but some may not be’ or ‘Most persons who dress as men have penises.’ Rather, we take it for granted that sex and sex category are congruent. Doing gender means creating differences between girls and boys and women and men, differences that are not natural, essential, or biological.”
            In my Gender, Social Justice and Globalization class we learned a lot about the injustices caused by gender throughout the world. Gender varies dramatically from culture to culture. In many parts of the world, for example, women are forced into working in brothels, and it is expectable for no one to help them escape from enslavement and it is expectable for their clients to rape them and use violence against them.
            A big part of gender how we dress. This varies from culture to culture as well. In western society it was once only acceptable for women to wear long dresses with corsets and not allow much skin to show. As time has changed, so has the acceptable clothing for genders. It is now acceptable for women to wear pants and most women today do not even own a corset. Under certain sects of Muslim culture a religious dress attire is expected to be worn, and is often enforced by the repercussions that are inflicted upon violators. For example if a woman does not wear her head veil she may be raped or even burned to death, and the blame would be put on her because she was dressing “promiscuously”. Weather we notice it or not, we are constantly being oppressed by the gender norms of our society, such as dress standards. Most people want to fit in so they conform to society’s standards, and those who don’t face the consequences-weather they be as mild as a glare or as sever as being burned at the stake.
            All societies divide labor in some way. In the history of western society, men have typically been the breadwinners and women the housewives. In modern society, it is typical for both men and women to be breadwinners. Women in the United States workforce earn on average only 74% of what men make though, and often still are required to do the same amount of household labor (Light). In non-western societies women usually also work and do the household duties, but often make no or little money for their work. Without money they are reliant on the men in their lives for money and their daily needs. This makes them more susceptible to domestic violence and other hardships, because they are forced to comply with their husband to get the money they need to survive.
            In American society, sex, sex categories, and gender are often very delicate topics. People strive to be masculine or feminine, often going above and beyond the necessary requirements to fit into a sex category. Men beef up at the gym, and try to act tough and manly. Women try to get as slim as possible and spend a significant amount of time on their appearance. The article explains that doing gender is unavoidable, because of the “social consequences of sex-category membership: the allocation of power and resources not only in the domestic, economic, and political domains but also in the broad arena of interpersonal relations”. Because there are only two accepted sex categories in the United States, male and female, people that do not fit perfectly into one of these categories tend to make others feel uncomfortable. The article explains that this is the primary reason for the oppression of homosexual and transsexual people.
            In my opinion, we take gender too seriously. The people of the United States are obsessed with gender categories. Everything we do, we do in a gendered way; “doing gender is unavoidable”. Our society’s gender norms cause much insecurity for people in their attempt to fit into a gender category, and they also cause people to feel uncomfortable when others do not properly fit into a gender category. The book explains that social movements are the best way to get societies to question existing norms and give social support to people who seek alternative lifestyles. Gender is constantly changing, but will always be a huge part of the way the world functions.