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Why I write?

 

I purchased a copy of George Orwell’s book Why I write from Amazon and it is an essay on the motives that made him decide to become a writer. I haven’t read the book yet but somehow I know why even before I started reading it as my eyes were fixed to that three-word syllable question “Why I write?” That title gazed into my timid eyes intruding my thoughts asking me questions “Why you write, Why do you want to write, Why you should write and Why you need to write?” That book won’t tell me the answer as only I should be the one to answer that.

Like George, whenever I was by myself in the school playground, I make up stories in my head and imagination was my best friend and confidant that got me through the dark times and the good times in the callous tides of racial hostility from the waves of innocent brats to waves from those who were a year above me. It is where I can be myself with the words I chose to surf on a piece of paper. It gave me a voice which spoke louder than speaking itself. It was my one way ticket to escape the African upbringing revolving around that “Children are seen not heard” where I cannot voice my opinion, express my thoughts into verbal format and that suppression followed me like a ball tied to a chain on my ankle dragging the heavy burden of being passive. Writing was my way out.

I remember during an English lesson at secondary school in the beginning of year 10, my teacher assigned us to write an incident in our lives as a homework assignment. The only incident I can think at the time is when I was called a “Paki”. That was the immediate light bulb that shone my motivation and the adrenaline rate ignited of a person at the start line of a 5K run to pick up a pen and scrawled onto my exercise book pushing away the doubt, the anxiety and vacate the world I was helplessly sucked into. When my teacher read it over the weekend, she made a compliment that I never forget that: “I read your story and I really enjoyed reading it and it seems like you wrote it from the heart”. Little did it know that left an unconscious mark in my mind telling me that I was destined to be a writer as I just pick up a pen and write a letter, a word, a sentence, a paragraph according to the beating my of heart along with the distortion of my mind.

However, that was short lived by the thundering invasion of the “Special Needs” label, my biggest tormentor, arch nemesis, arch enemy, the bully in my mental playground who was not a person but a label, a word that had more power than me and belonged to government. My mind was a hostage to that label.  It dominated and corroded every fibre of my confidence, my self worth and the ability to speak my mind and defuse confrontation only to be engulfed by the resentment and rage. That is when writing came to the rescue. It was “The pen is mightier than the sword” moment and the only weapon to help me to fight back against that label or any label thrown at me sending me into a pit of victim mentality and focus was the antidote against the self doubt that tormented me and creates a world where I can be a survivor and forget being a victim in a world I have no control of. Sheer egoism was one of the four motives he (Orwell) listed and that caught my eye. Writing, how he states it:

“Desire to seem clever, to be talked about, to be remembered after death; to get your back on the grown ups that snub your childhood etc, etc. It is humbug to pretend this is not a motive, and a strong one. Writers share this characteristic with scientists, artists, politicians, lawyers, soldiers, successful businessmen — in short, with the whole top crust of humanity. The great masses of human beings are not acutely selfish. After the age of about thirty, they almost abandon the sense of being individuals at all — and live chiefly for others, or are simply smothered under drudgery. But there is also the minority of gifted, willful people who are determined to live their own lives to the end, and writers belong in this class”(p4,5)

He was right. It is the most powerful effective non violent method of revenge to get back at our enemies, my school tormentors, the system that enslaved me on the “special needs” statement leaving me exposed to detrimental mislabelled connotations of “Autistic?” , “Asperger’s”, and “Emotional and Behavioural problems” and the racists that call me “Paki”, “Nigger” and other authority figures and labels mostly the ‘special needs’ label that pained me, put me down, humiliated me, excluded me that led me to put my depression, my resentment, my anger, my distress and outrage into something constructive, thus writing came to my rescue. I need to read as well in order to plan the words I am going to use to form a sentence to show the world and my tormentors what I think of them and it will stay with them after I depart from this world.

Writing helped me build a bridge to walk away from my past and away from the anxiety on what the future holds to the other side where I am levelheaded in the present moment. The proverb: “The pen is mightier than the sword” fits the motive as I can chase away the ghost of self-doubt, create conflicts and neutalise conflicts simultaneously. It helps and encourage me to brainstorm ideas for a story to help me solve the problems in my life and the lives of my future audience to neutralise their own problems in their lives and lives of many generations to come.

Yes, I definitely agree with him saying: “All writers are vain, selfish and lazy, and at the very bottom of their motives lies a mystery”. Writing was the opportunity for me to become more selfish in a good way as it taught me, I can assert my own voice and identity and broke the silence of my enslaved passivity and overwhelming emotions I bottled up for longer periods of time. Instead of writing what people want me to write, I write what I want to write and write what I know. As long as I write, I am safe in my little world full of words, similes, metaphors, idioms and paragraphs from a world that is a base of psychological uncertainty, hostility and corruption.

 

 

That is why I write.

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Eating White bread: Growing up black in a white space

I do not recall most of the memories of growing up black on white bread but I try my best. The term white bread to me is a metaphorical way to help me explain and hopefully attract the understanding of my potential audience, that white bread symbolises assimilation to whiteness or the white culture through a breakfast or lunchtime ritual of eating a bacon sandwich, bacon buttie or bacon sarnie which was referred in the urban dictionary.  To some, the bacon sandwich creates controversy within Islamic spaces where bacon and other types of pork are prohibited. Unable to recall them is a form of coping mechanism which to me describes as painful and upsetting, known to psychologists or those with minds who fascinated with psychology as repression.

I was born and grew up in a predominately white town called Harlow, one of the new towns that was built under the New Town Act 1946 following the design by Sir Frederick Gibberd after the Second World War to help reduce the enormous mass of residents in London due to the Blitz (although there is continuous growth of ethnic minorities habituating at present). I wasn’t aware that I was different until I was at nursery school, where I found myself splashing about in the paddling pool with the other children. Whilst they were enjoying splashing spits of water onto the concrete, I found myself constantly peering at the front and soles of my feet and the front and palms of my hands. It struck me instantly that I was different. My hair was different from the others as it was a solid spongy mass of curls that covers every outline of my scalp. My hair was black but my skin was brown so were my eyes but when I look other people, their skin colours were light pink along with their hands and feet, but is classified as “white” and their eyes were either brown same as mine but sometimes blue, hazel or green but their hairs were straight in blond, dark brown, blackish brown or brown or orange. They could dress it in a way to suit theirs. When I tried to dress my hair like theirs, it comes back the same.

I found myself standing on the front lawn of my house facing the row of hedges in front where people would scoop litter underneath, passing by on one Sunday afternoon. The sun was shining and smiling down on me, telling me it was a lovely day for a venture out, hearing the rattling roar of the food processor away from the kitchen where mum was shredding fish for her own supper or weird scent of palm oil articulating along the corridor. Suddenly, I see a white boy with brown hair in the style of a mushroom or mullet people would say now, dressed in a pair of black t-shirt and shorts carrying his bike by his side through the gate landing his bike on the lawn before reaching the front door. As he opened the door to enter his house with his bike he looked me. I was full of excitement that he would ask: “Would’ja wanna play?” or “Would’ja wanna come in and play computer games with me?” I usually respond by shyly shrugging my shoulders. Instead, he pulled an unpleasant face sticking his tongue out.

“Packie” he spat out and closed the door behind him. When I think of the word “Packie”, I imaginatively assumed that was short for packed lunch as my imagination depicted two loaves of white bread suppressing a puddle of chocolate spread with the crust shaved off. Mother reminds me to eat the crust because it was good for me. It wasn’t good for me as that crust was brown depending on the colour complexion and is usually shaved off. All is left was two uncrusted loaves of white bread glued together by chocolate spread. It came to my senses that the chocolate spread perfectly matched the shades on colour of my skin along with the crust of the bread. That word pricked every nerve inside me. It made me felt I was a freak, abnormal and what was frustrating that I found myself with my throat clog up with humiliation and confusion unable to say something horrible to him back. I couldn’t cry or tell mother about it.

I was alone, with my throat still choked by that painful word from that half-wit. Not even a single neighbour was there to witness what happened or to tell my mother on what happened or even a kind hearted neighbour or stranger to give that boy a telling off and come to my aid asking if I was alright. Now in my imagination, the sun is covered by an unhappy grey cloud above showering heavy spits of rain like hailstones hitting my mass of black hair hard and my clothes drench sticking to my vulnerable body like glue leaving me to retreat back to the base I called home surrounded by the aromatic sizzle of fish being fried.

After the mental rainstorm, I plucked up the courage to venture out again no one was there but when I was walking through the aisle of semi detached houses, I eventually saw that same boy, the prat who spat the word “Packie” at me. My eyes focused on him looking down on his little sister at the porch who looks sad with her head looking down on the concrete of her porch. As soon as he noticed me coming towards him, I stopped to my feet stuck on concrete staring at him with my mind ready for him to call me “Packie” again as my happy go lucky mood beginning to fade.

“Wot bout him?” he asks his little sister whose face was lowered facing the ground looking upset in a firm demanding tone, glaring his beaming eyes from my direction to her. “Der black one?”

“Huh?” she questioned in a soft cry.

“Dat black one there?” glaring back at me with his spiteful pointed finger. My feet remained stuck on the concrete waiting for a response from her voice. I was beamed by the boy’s facial expression shooting directly at me. I knew from the look on his face that he wanted her to say yes. My puzzled mind spinning with the questions on what is he going to do next if she said yes: Is he gonna beat me up where I was unable to fight back, spitting hostility onto my fragile looking face again, or call me names before he returned to his focus to his little sister.

“No” she shook her head innocently.

I walked passed him with an overwhelmingly undeterred sigh of relief,  and he looked gutted. He threw an intimidating glare as if he wanted to say, “Yer lucky, cos if she said yes I’ll deck you, you Packie!” and at the same time was thumped by the phrase of  “Der  black one” or “dat black one there” especially more thumped by the word “black” itself. Black was the colour of ink which Father uses when he does his paper work at his desk in the master bedroom, and one of the two colour ink pens we use at school. Black was the colour of Charcoal that we use in art lessons at school. Black was the colour of the shoes we wore at school. Black was the colour of tar concrete we walk on. Black was the colour of food burnt in the oven when left unnoticed for a long period of time. Black was the colour of the shorts and t – shirt that boy was wearing when he called me “Packie”, and referred me to his little sister as “Der black one or dat black boy there”. That is when I instantly learnt as I grew up that the word “black” would later become the appropriate suitable “political term” to define my skin colour, even though, it was physically brown. What hurt me more was he confused me with the former. First, he called me a Packie, now he calls me the black one, or the black one there. Looking back now, I wanted to turn around and throw a witty response in my so-called fake cockney accent to that silly twerp: “Make up your mind mate, am I the Packie or am I der black one or the der one there?” throwing it all back to confuse his mean nasty mind.

Later on, I found myself wondering around the neighbourhood observing the neighbours where I am usually distracted by the roaring noise of their lawnmower ploughing onto the thick bushy green grass or watching them hoovering their cars overwhelmed by the warm weather looking down on them whilst I emerge slowly out of my base to imaginatively, find my feet stuck in a pond of humiliation by the spat of “Packie”. I have no choice but to keep shuffling through the puddle as I went the puddle goes with me. When I was returning, a pair of boys whose skin colour was brown like mine but it was lighter than mine, had the same curly hair, pedalling on a bike with one boy standing as he was pedalling and the other behind sitting on the seat with his legs dangling on the side of the bike paralleling on the ground . I mimicked the same face as that boy did to me and spat out “Packie” to them.

“Oiii!” one boy exclaimed. “Get lost” he continued. “Fuck off” joined by the other pedaling passed me, with my eyes following them as they slipped through a path to an island of houses watching disappear into the furthest end of block. I found that they were exactly hurt and cross by the same word, the boy delivered to me.

At primary school on a bright summer Tuesday, I’m sitting at a table of 4 to 6 class members including me, in a maths lesson a voice called my name: “Phillip”

I  lifted my head up from my exercise book and turn to the direction of the boy called my name out.

“You’re blackcurrant” he smirked.

“You’re cream” I snapped defensively.”

I raised my hand up to catch to attention of the class teacher that he called me blackcurrant.

“Miss he called me blackcurrant”

She gaze at him for a second and said with a disappointing look on her face: “That’s not nice. You don’t take a mickey about someone’s skin colour”.

“But he called me….” he croaked into heavy heave of sobs”.

At break-time, that boy was sitting at the bench telling everyone there sulking: “I got told off cos fff- Phillip call’me cream” he sharply said my name with so much venomous resentment. My mind was raging at him: “Cos you call’me blackcurrant!” I was more insulted by the word ‘black’ than the word “currant”. Then again to rub salt to the wound, in my eyes, looking back now I learnt if the two rs and the a or how I say it in vibrant way, if I subtract the two rhubarbs and an apple from the word “currant” it equals the naughty word that refers to the private region of the female anatomy now used as a swear word to describe someone who is a incompatible or unpleasant, so in an implicit way he inadvertently smirked: “Phillip you’re a black cunt”.

The word “Packie” came to spread in school at the end of year three through to year four. My father once told me that: “If they call you “Packie, you call them pigs”.

I took his advice. After lunch, I saw a group of girls approaching through the open space classroom where my class was assigned on the right hand side from their direction as part of academic year and was acknowledged that they were not allowed to use the exit through the open space classroom to the left hand which housed the Year 5s and instead of using the exit behind the main hall. As they were slipping down the aisle between our classroom and our sitting room to use the exit in the yr 5s classroom, I stood two feet from them and explained: You’re not allowed to come through here”.

“You’re not allowed to come through here “One girl mimic in a deep voice, with her knee stretched out like a sumo wrestler mimicking a gorilla referring to the shape of my distinctive African nose.

“Monkey face” another girl hissed. I abruptly felt her pleasure in that smirk.

“You pink pigggssss!!” I impulsively roared angrily. The laughter erupted from their mouths as they ran towards the exit. I turned right to my only to meet the angry face of my class teacher as I hear her feet slapping angrily on the ground as my outburst caught her attention.

“You think that was very nice eh?” she barked. “Is it!” with her hands slapped on her hips as she stopped to a halt.

“No” I said impulsively jumped the loud rage from her lungs. But in my mind trying make my tongue stutter to speak back  “B-b-but they were…………….”

“Are you gonna apologise then?” with her demonised eyes shooting down at my timid face.

“Yes” came in a soft timid reply.

“Go on then!”

As requested I walked into that classroom towards the exit and pushed the door open and punched out: “Sorry”. But those girls were not there but to see a group of young children look like year 2s at a  bench built in beige red bricks underneath the wooden bench at the far distance. Her barking orders sucked out the energy from me to find them and apologise. If I did apologise would I be rewarded with an unpleasant spiteful greeting of the monkey taunt or chocolate any name referring to my skin colour and my wide nose? But I ended punching sorry to the air of the hostile environment I offended and suffocated in.

“Mum” Am I a Packie?” I asked with a soft worrisome tone.

“No Phillip. You’re African” She replied. “Packie’s are those who are from Packiestan and you’re not a packie are you?

-“No” I shook my head firmly.

“Well then. If they call you Packie, just tell them you’re African and if they still call you that you tell your miss”.

During lesson time or at break time whenever I’m called horrible names, I would daydream that someone would stick up for me when one will bark out:

“Go play with your Packie friend (me) and eat his Packie food!”

“He’s no Packie, he’s African you idiot! It’s not Packie food it’s African food!” he would exclaimed! “Learn some Geography you moron!”

Later through the end of year 4 and the end of year 5, I learnt the proper spelling of that word. It was not spelt as P-a-c-k-i-e, P-a-c-k-e-e,  or P-a-c-k-y as I imagined. It was spelt as P-a-k-i, Paki. The word derived from the prefix of “Pak” attached to the suffix of “istan” equals Pakistan, a country in the Indian subcontinent or the South Asian continent along with neighbouring countries of India, Bangladesh, Nepal, Sri Lanka and Afghanistan. That instantly struck a nerve to every part of my body aching along with every lobe of my brain ached by spelling of “Paki” not  “Packie”. That word is what I always dread for whenever I step out of the house or walk through the school gates. Most of the name calling came from the innocent voices of children below my year and to the angry mature voices of children above my year so I was practically in the middle of it. It was frustrating that I couldn’t tell a teacher or in my thoughts, would beat up every one of them to a pulp. If I did then I would get the telling off leaving me crippled with fear that it would be reported to the headmaster who then would notify my mother who would then physically castigate me.

So I found myself putting up every amount of name calling to avoid being scorned by teachers who I timidly assume take their side. So I had no choice to bottle things up, ignore them and daydream to escape the unpleasant voices from the hostile environment I was in. I was not only been called a Paki as I can recall others names in detail which too played in my mind, “blackie”, “brownie”, “nigger”, “pooh”, “chocolate”, and “monkey”. But ‘Paki’ was the word my mind was able to recall most and mostly I was hurled by it. I even believed I was a Paki. Every time I look in the mirror I imagine that my afro would be straight like the white person’s hair, my nose would be smaller and my lips would be thinner like the white person’s nose and lips. On the inside I am a white boy, but to outsiders with my brown skin, I would be in their eyes, a Paki. I would imagine to find myself be subjected to a daily hobby of theirs. It is called Paki- bashing. Paki bashing was originated in the 60s to 80s which was the aftermath of the mass immigration of South Asians to Britain as a result of being invited to obtain employment within the manufacturing sector. In the case of West Africa, migration was historical. They were part of the transatlantic slave trade where they arrived in the US and UK as slaves during colonialism arriving on the plantation fields.

I do not know why they decide “Paki” was the suitable name to insult my colour although I was not born in Pakistan, India or any of the Indian subcontinents nor my parents are from those countries. In fact I was born in England and my parents were born in Ghana. But still the word for them was the perfect weapon of choice to disfigure my self – image and break my spirit. My imagination tells me that if they call me a “Nigger”, they would face expulsion or if the hands of the clock go back to the Victorian era, they would receive a cane to their backside. However if they call me a “Paki”, they would get off lightly by verbal reprimand or be demanded to give me a sincere apology. In other words, they get away with murder. One way to put it is by calling me that word is a sneaky way to call me Nigger or especially Blackie as it rhymes with “Paki”. The other explanation I could think which is understanding that “Nigger” spelt as “Nigga” to them is a cool word that is used by many black rappers and is shared as a code to symbolise brotherhood and to other cool black kids and unfortunately, I wasn’t referred as one of the “cool black kids”.

I would be greeted by the reception of “Go away you Paki”, “Fuck you, you  Paki” “Up yours you Paki”, “Get lost you Paki”, “You Paki Fucker” mostly in the school playground but also outside school. During assembly time, a girl who was in year one showed her badges she got from her local brownie club to the headmaster. Then the headmaster turned to us and asked: “Put your hands up if you know anyone who is a brownie?

Few of my classmates raised their hands up and pointed at me and my cousin as they chuckled. I was reminded that I was the “brownie” that stood out and there was no way of escaping into space or retaliating as I would be the one get the telling off. So I found myself trying to chuckle with them as on the inside I was deeply embarrassed, hurt and excluded. During lunchtime in year four,  I was sitting with pupils a year below me and a classmate told about something I cannot recall and responded from a group in year three.

“It’s Phillip and Angelo” one sniggered.

“No it’s Phillip the monkey” another sneered.

“Monkey” another voice joined. “Monkey Monkey boy Monkey” the rest joined the chanting leaving me alone, hurt, vulnerable and excluded.  The first thing in my 9 year old mind wanted was to escape by bury my head in my arms and let out a cry.

“Wot’s da matter monkey, yer gonna cry?” a newcomer joined the gloating.

I wanted to cry. I want to let out all the vulnerability, humiliation and distress only to be engulfed by anger and rage to violently retaliate. But I couldn’t let out a single tear as if I did, my common sense tell me that I would give them the satisfaction and if I resort to a violent retaliation, I’ll be in trouble and my mother be informed for her to smack me.

In the beginning of year 5 and after returning from the local swimming pool as part of the school’s curriculum, the first thing happened as I entered through the school gates, two boys stood about two feet away from me and one chanted:

“Monkey boy!”

“Errr look at his trainers” invited his friend to the ridicule as he peered down at my brand new black Cica trainers, Clarks very own sports brand which I felt comfortable wearing.

“Hahahaha monkey” his friend joined the laughter peering down at my shoes which was the derision for his mockery and I had no shame wearing them as in my 9 year old mind, I rather wear these trainers than the school shoes that mother would make me wear.

When I was walking home approaching the shops, a trio of boys gliding aggressively on their roller blades, one of them looked at me, his face snarled with anger, his teeth clenched and wielded his angry fist at me. The second he done that, the intimidation bristled my nerves sending me down to the bottom of the food chain as the powerless petrified prey whilst he was the predator looking forward to his feast of his lunch, me.

“Der’s dat Paki” he hissed through his clenched teeth. “Oi don’t stand der, get im, get dat bloody Pakiiii!!” he loudly commanded with blood thirst anger erupting from his lungs instructing one of his comrades who slides in his roller blades with his hand sticking out like a Frankenstein zombie. I swift away by his pinch of the flesh of my t shirt and looked both ways for any signs of oncoming cars driving by before I made the run for my life. As I ran I down to slope towards my house hearing: “I’ll deck ya, yer flipping Paki!!” like he was taking his last breath in an angry blood curling tone. By the time I reached home, my legs were drained of energy out of breath and my heart beating in my throat leaving a metallic taste of blood in my throat and solaced into watching TV shows on Nickelodeon.

During English in the spring of year five, we were assigned to a write an incident in our lives based on the book titles of “I’m hurt”,” I’m angry”, “I’m sad”, I’m jealous” “I’m worried” and had write how these incidents reflect those feelings. One of the titles was I managed to recall from my photographic memory was “I’m hurt” and the first thing I want to write about in my mind was when I was called a “Packie” (later spelt as Paki) stored as a piece of data in my hard drive, my memory box and I watched my pen draw words to align into a sentence of a story and as I soon found the confidence to open my timid mouth to spill my heart wrenching paragraph. I felt the mixture of upset, indignation, anger and hurt in my voice when read every word of my story to attract the audience, my classmates which left them feeling soft heartened not to a point the classroom flooded with tears but to be delivered with facial expression of pity and distraught.

Eating white bread was my refuge to escape the hostile name calling orbiting around the words referring to my skin colour through the angry and resentful bite of a sandwich at lunchtime any filling would help my mind runaway from the missiles that shoot from the nozzle of my enemies’ mouth to the comfort of my taste buds. White bread was the only true best friend I had to help get through the best times and mostly, the worst times.

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Post Uni Blues: My motorboard drowned in the deep blue sea.

I  researched on depression after university, so I typed in “Depression after university ” on the search bar at Google and the results automatically popped up with many headings including: “Post uni blues”, “Post-College Depression”, “Depression after uni” and “Post-graduation depression”. The first line caught my eye was an article entitled: Post-Graduation Depression published in The Guardian in late 2001. I clicked on the link, leading me to read the interesting article. Having read similar experiences from various websites and personal blogs, I start to realised I was suffering from it.

According to the article, it said to be a common phase among most graduates, as they are leaving behind the culture of  lecturers, seminars, assignments, waking up late, all night partying, getting drunk on cheap cider and other alcoholic beverages at the SU, dieting on takeaways, baked beans on toast to hand in their Student IDs and NUS cards to be the little fishes in the big pond, the job market. The job market is ruthless towards new upcoming graduates who are wet behind the ears by the traditional stereotype that a degree entitles you a first class ticket to the job market. Unfortunately, I was one of them.

The biggest symptom I picked up was insomnia where I find myself going to bed at 7 in the morning and wake up at 3 or 9.30 at night smelling of dried up sweat, the aftermath from every crippling anxiety attack. The minute I tossed my own cap up in the neutral warm sky, I found myself instantaneously crippled with constant worry, doubt and bewilderment on what the future may hold. I was forced to accept the epiphany that I was transitioning from the regressed naive mature student who assimilated to the student culture to constantly fighting in a battle to adapt to the world of the “Dog eat dog”. Everyday, my mind has been constantly intruded by various career options including, lawyer, chef, doctor, journalist and the list goes on without giving me a chance to select a definite route that suits me.

I spent my time brainstorming on possible career options that is relevant to my degree (Criminology and Sociology Joint) so I would not feel I wasted three years of studying a subject that I’m not going to implement into something constructive. Somehow, the word “Journalism” constantly pops in my subconscious mind as I somehow gain this “journalistic adrenaline” when I write my essays or in my journals and the “ism” is suffixed to the word “Journal” as I unconsciously enjoy writing my thoughts, opinions and asserting my individuality on paper. Guess there is hope I thought?

However unfortunately, the hope of breaking the vicious circle was squatted by the thundering invasion of the “Special Needs” Label that dominated and tormented my mental psyche yelling at me: “Although you got that 2:1, you’re still that special needs boy. You’re not gonna be anybody, you’re nothing, you’re dumb and always gonna fail on regardless what you do!” That label had haunted me throughout my childhood, my school days,  my adolescence and now my post – graduation.

The only way to escape was to dissociate into my daydream state asking myself what if I stayed at university on a postgraduate course or I could’ve done a different degree subject and got a job from that? At mostly times, I force myself to sleep. I managed to wake up, only to join the dole queue signing on, researching and making various and numerous applications to recruitment sites or bullied into meeting up with friends who are still in university where one of them cannot take “no” for an answer and doesn’t seem to understand my circumstances.

I took a trip down to memory lane in early August to the town centre, the park where I used to socialise and play imaginatively with the other children, the schools I attended, things have changed dramatically. The park used to have swings, benches where I usually sit down by myself staring at wide scenery feeling in touch with nostalgia whenever I hear echoes of my childhood screams of glee pleading people to stop when I was span around on the rotating poles to a point I hallucinated with the bright green field.

Now, the whole park has been filled with a large mass of green grass covering a huge space of carefree innocence, another tell – tale sign that I have no choice but to enter the world of adulthood. I can have a bit of fun and relax once in a while. The only thing that concerns me as a graduate is to rather think independently and logically rather than being dependent on others. Whenever I wake up, the first noise that hit my ears were the joyful screams coming from the lungs of children in the school playground giving me that nostalgic sense of being carefree and comfort are now permanently vanished.

The mixed feelings of sadness and resentment invades my mind driving me to sleep again until those screams die out. It sent me another nostalgic feeling when I was a kid, running around feeling protected from potential grown ups who would peer through the fence. Hearing these screams made me want to jump onto the fast train reversing back to my childhood. Unfortunately, train journeys are not a fan of reversing backwards, same with the hands of time who is also not a fan of turning anti-clockwise. Both train journeys and the hands of the clock are passionate about moving forward so I guess I have no choice but to move forward even though it’s tempting to rewrite history, an easy option for those who dwell onto guilt and regret.

I instantly became the same person before I return to college undertaking an Access course, a fast – track ticket to university, watching daytime television shows, joining the dole queue at my jobcentre to sign on so I can get my fortnightly benefits motivating me to search for work with no intention on what I wanted to do in the long-term but to use the benefit money to build my bank balance, whilst sending in CVs and completed job application forms to various sites and companies with no intention on what I want to do as a career.

I spent most of my post-uni period grieving my three years of freedom and self-discovery by looking through uni photos posted onto my Facebook account, repeatedly reading my essays scribbled with ticks, feed-backs and grammatical errors, which led me to bully myself telling myself : “You should have worked harder to obtain a First as that was your aim” Rather than listening to my own best friend  who constantly reminds me: “It’s better to get a 2:1 than a low mark or no honors at all!”. Each day starts with me fighting off the feelings of despair, vulnerability and hopelessness into remission only for those feelings to return like an unpleasant boomerang.

These patterns continue to fluctuate throughout Christmas and into the start of 2012. I have already passed the I’m feeling “suicidal” phase and now just surviving and getting on with life struggles. My laziness and insomnia started to take a massive toll on my family as I cannot do simple tasks, like taking the bins out to be collected, vacuum the whole house and ironing my clothes. One day, I eventually found the strength to drag out the vacuum cleaner from the cloakroom to start my daily therapeutic outlet, followed by laundry duties. I  learnt to take things easy as it comes, like catch up the latest episodes of Family Guy, Coronation Street, Law and Order, followed by browsing the channel menu of Sky Plus for the latest movies to retreat from the psychological uncertainty by my imagination.

During the post-graduate depressive experience, I start to reflect on past mistakes I made as an undergraduate. One of the mistakes was not planning at the start of my final year by brainstorming  post-graduate routes as I was distracted by the pressures of writing an undergraduate dissertation, essays, falling  into the wrong crowd, participating political protests, and on top of that, allowing myself to be dominated by the “Special Needs” label, the main root of my anxiety and low self-esteem. Strangely as it sounds I begin to  appreciate even the little things which people take for granted.

Three years later, I have recovered gradually, but still have some symptoms of anxiety, which lessened thanks to positive thinking. Without any luck of a graduate breakthrough to the working world of independence, on a subconcious level, it is best to reinstate into academia for a master’s degree and progress onto a PhD. This sounds like a promising and optimistic idea. Although I would be aware on regards of numerous internships and work experiences I obtain, the chances to be a victim of the “catch 22” with a burden of debt is fifty – fifty. Despite of the possibilities weighed up including the risk of another post – graduate depressive relapse, I know it will be worth it in the long run.

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The Special Needs Label: The impact of the Life SENtence

According to the article Sentenced to Failure, it reveals that Ofsted have accused schools for exploiting the special needs label as a tool to cover poor teaching strategies. The SEN (Special Education Needs) label was used to measure pupils by socio – economic backgrounds especially, those who are from economically disadvantaged backgrounds. As a result, those who who are given the special needs label will face a lifetime of failure, self-doubt and psychological and mental distress.

Although poverty was never viewed as an eligible reason for the SEN, pupils who are from lower and working class backgrounds or socio – economical deprived areas are more likely to receive the label than their middle class counterparts. Additionally, pupils are twice more likely to be given the label if they receive free school meals. Katherine Ann Angel, a teacher and author with years of experience in fostering and teaching children with special educational needs believes that children who come from poor working class families are prone to be stamped by the label.

Although there is a presence of learning disabilities including Dyslexia and ADHD, some of the pupils are simply products of poor parenting and poor teaching. Despite of the detrimental affects the special needs label can have on pupils, some of them managed to rise above the SEN tag by sending them to schools that provide empathy and positive encouragement like Tim for example, who was on the SEN when he was seven and his prognosis was slim. However, when he attended secondary school, he was emancipated from the SEN label as the teachers considered it was “pointless” and told he was better than the label, which gave him the confidence to accomplished 11 GCSEs and sailed to university to study for a degree in sports. This example shows a pillar of optimism as we should acknowledge that a child’s position should not be determined by the SEN label and other characteristics on regards of class, race and cultural backgrounds as long as they have the right help, understanding, guidance and support. Thus pupils should be encouraged to participate in activities with intention to develop a healthy degree self – esteem and self – confidence.

However, some of them were not so lucky as the SEN label may give a temporary signal that a child in academic distress and the label already caused emotional and psychological damage. Sean is one example, he was the fifth of seven children who missed out a momentous amount of primary education because of poor parenting though exposure to child abuse and neglect. Consequently, led him to become an SEN case. Despite his unstable childhood and the SEN label, he displayed an above average level in reading and ignited his fascination with learning through a one to one private tuition by a foster parent who is a teacher. However he reinstated into foster care and out of education. Eventually, a serious crime landed him a prison sentence. This is an obvious example on how negative influences can increase the child’s chance of receiving the SEN label which can eventually exacerbate a child’s likelihood to engage in delinquency and criminality.

On reference to the article, Every Child Matters? The Impact of special educational needs programmes reveals that special educational needs programmes are designed to meet the needs of children who are perceived to be slower than their non – special needs labelled counterparts, with the intention to give them time to adjust to their specific learning difficulties through the help of the SEN Code of practice. Although the programme aims to tackle a child’s particular learning difficulty, it serves as a weapon of  dehumanization, leaving them to fall into a future cycle of diagnostic relabelling and mislabelling. The SEN programme also exacerbates the extent of their difficulties rather to help them succeed according to their unique learning ability. Another potential use of the SEN programme is that it will create a series of culture conflict, especially those who are from Black Asian and Ethnic Minority backgrounds, intensified by an unconscious degree of institutional racism which would eventually expose those effected to a cycle of marginalization and exclusion from schools and other education institutions and in consequence, could lead to lifetime of mental health as the SEN label can persist in adulthood.

Education institutions continue to apply the SEN label as a quick fix to mask the problems that pupils endure, such as child abuse, bullying and victims of unfortunate circumstances endured by those from ethnic minority backgrounds and areas that breed drugs, alcoholism and anti – social behaviour, in preference to find and use effective methods that would neutralise these problems. The special needs label could be seen as a motivation tool to help them take personal responsibility with the intention to thrive academically and life in general with the help and support from the right people. At the same time it leaves a permanent scar on their sense of self worth and self esteem. On an unconscious level, the SEN, label can be exploited by education authorities with intention to have control over those who are at the bottom level of the socio – economic hierarchy.

http://cep.lse.ac.uk/pubs/download/cp285.pdf

http://www.tes.co.uk/article.aspx?storycode=6219928

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Why aging is so different among various cultures?

In western societies, we were taught from a young age to respect our elders. We are usually conditioned to give up our seats on buses, trains and benches in shopping centres to the elderly. Discounts on bus fees, haircuts, cinemas and gym membership are made affordable them as their pension cannot cover the average fees, as those from higher class backgrounds and active members of society can. We were discouraged from using inappropriate language, such as profanity,  languages of sexual nature or languages which reflects on ageism at their personal space as we do around children. We would see old people as lovely and wonderful people who say “hello” to people as they walk past.

However, as time moves on and things start to change, some people begin to show a lack of respect towards old people. Nowadays, the elderly are targeted for fraud, mugging, burglary and harassment. Newspaper articles are plastered with photos of old people covered in black eyes and bruises, having been mugged and attacked by young people. Even stories and news reports features them becoming victims of white-collar crimes to serious and disturbing crimes, such as rape, sexual assault and even murder. The elderly are now being perceived as “feeble and vulnerable” burdens to society (BBC News). Stories reveal that old people are now on the receiving end of  medical treatment, treated disrespectfully and neglected in hospitals and care homes. There are subconscious common belief that  young people do not show any respect towards old people and now rarely, people do not even make an attempt to give up their seats for the elderly and even pregnant women in buses and trains.

Old age is seen as historical and cultural and construction of a natural phenomenon. There are few positive views on ageing, as it’s inevitable and it’s a life process, they are seen as the “masters” of knowledge, they live in a centuries where well-known historical events happen such as World War, The Holocaust and the Racial Segregation in the 1940s. In the negative perspective, they are perceived to be a problem to society and an economic burden in the healthcare and social security sectors. They are dependent on other people, such as their caregivers, adult children and members from health and social services. They are already be deprived of their independence because of their physical health, particularly limited mobility. They often live alone, either widowed, separated or suffering from empty nest syndrome, a feeling of emptiness when their children grown up and flew the nest.

In African societies, old people are often treated with respect and dignity and seen as superior to the young generation. Unfortunately, old people make up the growing population of people living in poverty in areas that economically deprived and underdeveloped according to BBC News.  They are much more vulnerable than children to contact any illness such as, malaria, fever and HIV and AIDS. They start to play roles as caregivers to their ill stricken adult children and orphaned grandchildren. In India and China, old people live in extended and reconstituted families with their married children and grandchildren. There are some explanations why old people are knowledgeable because they have vast load of life experiences, than the young and middle age people. Some of them spend their retirement going on cruises, take up a new hobby or even go travelling or attempt to write a great novel.

Society stereotypically views the elderly as grumpy with have no sense of humour, whilst some of them are happy to tell stories and make jokes in a way to cope with negative burdens in which old age may bring.  They are well-mannered and seen as senior citizens and do not tolerate offensive language. Their upbringings and education and experiences have made them matured and carry a huge bag of  wisdom, eager to donate to the younger generation as they witnessed various historical events. Thus old age should be seen as a burden nor as a root of envy. Most of all, should be seen as an inevitable process, which may bring a series of emotions which are seen in other life changes.

In America, older people are spoiled by luxuries since social security facilities were started in 1935. The life expectancy in america has increased to 77 years. They are taking advantage of good quality healthcare and prescription drugs. Some of them are wealthy with an income worth $100,000. In Argentina, the elderly are mistreated economically and socially and often neglected. They make up just under 12% of the population. Some of them receive old age pension whilst more than 1.5 million have no insurance and live in the line of poverty.  In Abkhazistan, a suburb in southern Russia, 1 in 4000 live beyond 100 years old and make up the population of old people living longer. They do not have worries about ageing as us, Britons and secondly, they work beyond the retirement age, working in fields, where they take care of the flocks of sheep and look after their great-grandchildren.

In Britain and western societies, old age is seen as a problem economically and physically.  However in other societies, the elderly are seen as powerful and superior by knowledge and wisdom, such as Japan, where they continue to work enabling them to gain prestige, wealth, power and status. Old people have more life experiences than the younger generation because they grew up in poverty, severe hardships where facilities were not available, witnessed historical unforgettable events, that provided them with valuable lessons and provision of a rich dose of wisdom and resiliency. During their time they never had economic rewards like we have now, such as technology, sanitation, better education and improved healthcare and medical facilities ,which we take for granted.

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How can the impact of poverty be understood in contemporary society?

poverty729-620x349When the word poverty is mentioned, we are captivated by an image of a child no younger than seven wandering the dusty wide streets of a third world country. The feelings of desperation, hunger, sadness, loneliness and vulnerability through his swollen tearful eyes after an hours’ search for a taste of satisfaction soften our hearts melting with sorrow, helplessness and compassion. A picture of his skeletal body pressing onto his flesh mounted on every charity leaflet displayed by street fundraisers we are approached by in our local high streets or a homeless man at the street corner only be heard by the cardboard held by his hands reading: Homeless and Hungry Please help with an exclamation mark as he bows his head down with his eyes peering down at the ground.

Tower block of flats with stairwells overpowered by heavy stench of  urine littered with dirty needles, debris of dust, empty food packets, dried on newspapers and magazine strips. A row of houses with windows patched with wood and walls patterned by graffiti, showing threats, offensive slurs and hatred presumably written by domineering and bullying feral minded youths with the routine of getting drunk on cheap alcohol purchased from shops on what their ignorant dictionary refer as “The Paki Shop”  a typical derogatory banter shared between among feral subcultures, an obvious reaction after being intoxicated by the cheap booze, brought with their “free money” from the government and the result of wave of immigration for South Asia in the 1960s. Their vocabularies are largely spat out with a tirade of profanity and their only reputation is to be thugs and anti – social menaces. This obviously captures our mind with resentment and awareness about the consequences of what poverty can bring, hostility and resentment towards those are from middle and upper class backgrounds.

Poverty is a major social issue along with racism, ageism, social exclusion and sexism. Although poverty is acknowledged and there are certain policies with the aim to neutralise  its high numbers, it continues to be a major issue worldwide. Poverty is not difficult to define as comes in two forms. Absolute poverty,  according to Rowntree (1890’s) is to have insufficient funds for their human rights. In clarity, the amount of income a person needs to pay rent, for food and clothing. Being poor also defines not having the materialistic needs to be accepted within the social norms of society in which Townsend (1970’s) defines as relative poverty. Relative poverty is obviously used to explain poverty in western societies where computers and mobile phones are used to be seen as luxuries in the past. Today, it’s becoming a norm for people to own them. If they do not have any of those items, they may be classified as poor and could make them feel excluded from society.

Functionalists like Davis and Moore (1967) and Parsons (1951) see inequality as unavoidable and is essential for society to create social cohesion. In comparison to other social groups, those who from below the poverty-stricken backgrounds remain stuck especially those as their environment lack opportunities that help them to escape poverty, such as apprenticeships, education and work training programmes. Thus, can be a breeding ground for anti-social behaviour caused by the feelings of frustration among subcultures that live there. Poverty can be seen as an incentive to motivate people, especially those who live poverty-stricken towns and neighbourhoods to find ways to better their chances to leave the depressing position behind by taking advantage of education and government related employment programmes. However, they are motivated by financial rewards rather than enrolling on programmes that aims to help them build their self esteem and self confidence.

Marxists thinkers like Westgaard and Resler (1976) and Kincaid (1979) argue that the bourgeoisie use poverty as an aid to help them meet their own selfish interest by exploiting the feelings of powerlessness and frustration held in the proletarians . Consequently, inequalities are created and eventually, lead to conflict and resentment among the proletarians towards the bourgeoisie . The strength of this explanation is that it highlights the concentration of wealth in the capitalist market and explains the ruling class uses the welfare state as a weapon to prevent the poor from rebelling against the capitalist system. Another criticism of the Marxist lens is it ignores the positives inequalities may bring. For example, it will give the poor and those from working class backgrounds the motivation and persistence to succeed and additionally, ameliorate their levels in resilience and coping skills.

Weberian thinkers like Townsend (1970) believe that inequalities are a result of the demands from the labour market and it is strongly influenced by characteristics, such as race, gender, age and level of education. This explanation highlights some points that people can be blamed for causing poverty especially concern revolve around race and gender. They (Weberians) also believe that people are enslaved in the poverty trap because they lack the power to force other social groups to increase their level of reward. However, Weberian thinkers can be criticised for ignoring the causes of poverty in individuals, such as discrimination in race, age, disability and socio-economic backgrounds. This (Weberian) approach is seen as  more sensitive to these issues of stratification and inequalities and do not see inequality as the cause of poverty. They see that inequalities focus on power and demands from the labour market. Weberians concurs  with the Marxists that inequality is unavoidable in the capitalist system. However, they do not mean that poverty itself is unavoidable. Inequalities can be reduced through progressive taxation, which means that the more money people earn, the more taxes they pay and suggest that relative poverty should be eliminated. This they believe could neutralise the financial burdens endured by those who are from lower and working class backgrounds.

The New Right believe capitalist economies play a key role in poverty  because businesses need to gain more profits by making sure that public spending are kept short. They (New Right) also believe the welfare state is to blame for causing poverty indirectly by forcing entrepreneurs to make higher tax payments. Consequently,  job opportunities are not created. They  feel the welfare state is responsible for encouraging people to be more interested in claiming benefits, which creates fatalistic attitudes, believing they are better off living on handouts rather than working for a minimum wage as they are put off by the possiblity of rejection from potential employers and a vicious no win situation. However, a criticism of the New Right is that poverty would increase if the welfare state was eradicated, thus exacerbating the levels of mixed emotions among those who are already trapped. They will unable to afford a healthy diet, leaving them susceptible to common illnesses, which could leave them absent from the labour market. This means, they won’t be receive a regular income to cover the basic needs for survival.

Women are more likely to suffer from poverty than men because of discrimination and demands of their stereotypical roles within the patriarchal society. Since the feminist’s movement in the 1960s, which severed ties with patriarchy, women are now striving for education and careers. However, women are more likely to gain part – time and menial jobs and this could have an impact on their pensions in later life. Women tend to dominate single parent families than men, making their chances of obtaining employment more challenging because of childcare duties. As a result, become more dependent on the state, leaving them sinking into a vicious circle. Feminists, especially those with radical views can argue the welfare state discourages women from seeking employment and as welfare state symbolises patriarchal control and feel threatened to be sanctioned if they work. Glendinning and Millar (1994) stressed that women may be restricted of access to other types of benefits and only 60% of women are entitled for maternity leave.

Women who are in the poverty trap are likely to exploit the welfare state by producing more babies and could lose their benefits if they obtain employment which agrees with Pollak (1961) who argue that women take advantage of their stereotypical roles. This can be seen as a criticism ignored by feminist thinkers additionally, the subject of prostitution, where women will engage in this risky activity to achieve the basic needs for survival especially those with children. This would result them to abuse particularly rape by their pimps and clients if they refuse to give them their services, in fear of having unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases. This would eventually leave them permanently incarcerated in the poverty trap.

Neera Sharma, a Policy Officer from Barnados (BBC News) says that poverty can impact a child’s personal, social and educational development. Lack of a healthy diet, hygiene and unconditional love play a part in child poverty. The cycle of deprivation by Rutter and Madge (1976) illustrates on how poverty can have an effect on people. For example, a child be born into poverty, grows up in a council estate and gains the lower class status. They may suffer from health problems because of their poor diet and this would affect their education performance and consequently, drop outwith no qualifications and difficulties of holding down a job and the cycle persists into adulthood. This could provoke them to engage in criminal activities to achieve the basic, materialistic or both needs . Therefore, it would make it difficult for them obtain employment, mirroring the cycle of deprivation. Eventually this cycle can be passed on from generation to generation. This can influence them and adopt this as a way of life manifest the fatalistic attitudes and refuse opportunities in employment and education.

People with disabilities are at risk of  poverty their  able – bodied counterparts as their physical health restricts them from seeking employment and if they do obtain employment, it would be low skilled and low paid. Oppenheim and Harker (1996) estimated that 47% of disabled were living in poverty in the 1980s. They also argue that higher rates of poverty among disabled people were partly due to social exclusion and discrimination because of the hostile attitudes held in the minds of the able-bodied and the stigma held in mainstream society, where they are labelled as “abnormal”. Alcock (1997) points out that disabled people are more likely to suffer from social exclusion and material poverty than able-bodied, thus increasing levels of depression and low self-esteem.

Disabled people have higher spending costs on items such as heating, adaptable aids, transport and heating than most people. 46% of disabled people lived in the poorest conditions in 1985 and reduced down to 38% in 1996 and 1997. The disability living allowance is designed to prevent financial hardships in disabled people and provided incentives, such as skills training and work preparation enabling them to seek employment. However, it can be criticised for ignoring that people can overcome their overcome with the right support and help from charities and governmental programmes specialising in disabilities. Another criticism of disability as it tends to concentrate on physical immobility and not those who are suffer specific learning disabilities, such as Dyslexia, ADHD, Dyspraxia and Asperger’s Syndrome. Thirdly, mental health is ignored as those who live with conditions particularly, bipolar disorder and schizophrenia are prone to prejudice and discrimination as the hostility held in society unconsciously views  them “crazy” or “mentally abnormal”. Thus excerabates their chances of entering the labour market and integrate to mainstream society.

Members from Black and Ethnic minority backgrounds are twice at risk of experiencing poverty than their white counterparts. Racial discrimination is obviously seen as the core root of poverty and unemployment. Institutional racism in education is a major problem in contemporary society as teachers hold subconscious negative racial stereotypes and lack understanding in cultural diversity and direction in schools, which result in low education attainment and poor academic performance within black and ethnic minoritity groups, provoking them to drop out. This eventually leads to a restriction of job opportunities and therefore, subject them to be permanently trapped in the cycle of deprivation. Thus, engage in criminal activities, such as drug dealing, theft, fraud and robberies against their white counterparts to express deep-rooted feelings of resentment.

Scott and Fulcher (1999) note that two – thirds of Pakistani and Bangladeshi families are in the bottom fifth of the income distribution in Britain. He also argues that ethnic minorities can experience problems with the benefits system as they receive a fewer amount benefits than their white counterparts and they feel the welfare state does not respond to cultural or family issues  e.g. Afro – Caribbeans are more likely to face poverty because they have higher numbers of single parenthood and treatment by staff at their local job centre. Ethnic groups are more like to be socially excluded due to of racism and language barriers if English is not their first language. Alcock (1997) notes that poor housing; ill-health and lack of education could be linked to financial inequality in the Black and Ethnic minorities, making it obvious that strong levels of racist attitudes held in hegemonic institutions, which can back up argument  causes of poverty within the black  and ethnic communities. Alcock can be criticised for ignoring the link between racial hostility and poverty in black and ethnic minorities especially held in institutions and towns that are predominately white.

Poverty continues to make a negative impact in contemporary society, through the theoretical lenses. Marxist thinkers resent the ruling class for the cause of poverty among the poor. However, the chances to rise above the poverty line lies in the self-belief and personal responsibility regardless of their characteristics. Unfortunately, enraged by the negative feelings experienced by poverty, some turn to crime, not knowing it would create a cycle of deprivation for their offsprings. Weberians made good points that people are to blame for their own poverty by refusing to take offers from the labor market and opportunities in education because of their fatalistic attitude. They also argue that poverty indicates the issue of power and status within the labour market along with inequalities. Functionalist thinkers argue poverty cannot be eradicated as it is needed to a certain degree to create social cohesion. Feminist thinkers feel that poverty reveal issues of sexism feeling the welfare state and benefit handouts favours the interest of patriarchy and women are seen as victims of  so-called “patriarchal welfare slavery”.

 

Alcock, P. (1997) Understanding Poverty, 2nd edn, Macmillan Basingstoke.

Class handouts: Sociology AS for AQA, Wealth poverty and welfare p274 – 81.

Class handouts: Poverty and Inequalities.

Class handouts: Theoretical explanations for poverty and the Welfare State.

Class handouts: Individual and groups most at risk of poverty.

Class handouts: Chapter 4 Poverty and social exclusion p 258 – 61.

Davis, K and Moore, W.E (1967 first published, 1945) ‘Some principles of stratifications’ in Bendix and Lipset (eds) (1967).

Haralambos, M, Holborn, M, Heald, R Sociology Themes and Perspectives: Chapter 5: Poverty and social exclusion, (2000), 5ed, HarperCollins, London, p313 – 14, 334 – 41.

Kincaid, J. (1979) ‘Poverty and the Welfare State’ in Irvine et al (ed.) (1979).

Parsons, T (1951) The Social System, The Free Press, New York.

Glendinning, C. and Millar, J. (1994) Women and Poverty in Britain: The 1990s, Harvester Wheatsheaf, Hemel Hempstead.

Pollak, O (1961) The Criminality of women A.S Barnes. University of Michigan

Oppenheim, C. and Harker, L. (1996) Poverty: Facts, 3rd edn, CPAG, London.

Rowntree, S. (1901) Poverty: A study of Town Life, Macmillan, London.

Townsend, P. (1970) ‘Measures and explanations of poverty in high and low-income countries in Townsend (ed.) (1970). (ed.) (1970) The Concept of Poverty, Heinemann, London.

Westergaard, J. and Resler, H. (1976) Class in a Capitalist Society, Penguin, Harmondsworth.

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Has scientific invention made society better or worse?

Imagine someone being rushed to floors of their local Accident and Emergency with a severed hand after an accident and was told by surgeons that the only option was to amputate it as they believe the hand is damaged beyond repair. Instead, they experimented with a special substance on the amputated region and eventually, the hand grew back identically to one which was lost. Cell regeneration is a fascinating topic which could bring hope in the future and revolutionize modern medicine. It’s the process of an organism replacing body parts. It is often seen as a healing process and noted for its ability to regrow amputated limbs, severed nerves, lost organs, eyes and wounds without any scaring. Amphibians such as frogs, newts and salamanders have this ability. I am asking a question on whether scientific invention in future medicine on cell regeneration will make society better or worse? Scientific invention can be created by using technology and science in medicine, physics and chemistry in a way to make us happier, independent, healthier and wealthier and wiser.

Limb regeneration will be a possible treatment in medicine thanks to a process called differentiation which involves the cells wrapping around the wound lose their identity. The cells then transform themselves into a cluster of cells called Blastema. Blastema cells are made up of stem cells which will then revise and transform into the type of cells required for limb growth. Scientists David Gardiner, a research biologist and his Dr Susan Bryant, a professor of biological sciences at the University of Southern California at Irvine have discovered the reason why human beings cannot regenerate body parts like the mentioned species. They believed that the signals in our genes which control the behaviour of limb growth were switched off.

Theories explained that we can regenerate everything including the limbs whilst we were in embryo. If a fetus had an operation which involves going under the knife and is expected to have an incision scar and surprisingly, after the baby is born, the scar which was sited on the region where the incision was made is literally invisible as if it was never had surgery. Unfortunately, soon as we are born, the genetic signals which play the role of limb growth are switched off and instead, the body responds to scarring and once the limb or any other body part is extracted, It will never grow back.

Assumptions explained that we can regenerate 25% of our livers. This is due to unipotency of hepatocytes, the mass of cells, which plays a role in storing protein and transformation of starch into energy and conversion of protein, cholesterol and bile salts by using DNA (Deoxyribonucleic acid) and RNA (Ribonucleic acid). Nadia Rosenthal from the Howard Hughes Institute believes we can regenerate our ribs if the membrane, which surrounds the lining of the rib, is still intact. The rib is often used as a bone graft for reconstructive surgery. We can also regenerate blood, bone marrow and the membranes in our stomach and small intestines. Cell regeneration will revolutionise the world of medicine and make life easier for doctors and patients. This will save time of doctors amputating body parts and also save money for patient as prosthesis are quite expensive depending on the brand such as Ossur and Dorset Ortho.

Violence, work related accidents, which involves using machines which are dangerous and malfunctioned, not properly fixed or poor neglegience and car accidents. Diseases such as, cancer and bacterial diseases such as necrotising fascitis and particularly bacterial meningitis, especially its dangerous form meningococal  septicaemia with meningitis or alone are responsible for limb loss and other body parts. Although prosthesis and grafting techniques such as nerve grafting, transplanting nerves onto a muscle area such as the chest to help  amputees like Jesse Sullivan, a former electrician who lost both arms after he accidentally touched an active cable which contain a voltage of between 7,000 – 7,500 to control the limbs by using his brain. The reality is that the prosthesis will not be good as the ones we are born with and often took for granted.

Prosthetic limbs are required to be worn for a limited amount of time and had to be changed and upgraded annually depending on the growing process of the person. Prosthesis can sometimes have inadequate fitting and unsuitable for some people. Losing a body part or a limb can have a devastating impact on the individual as it will alter their lifestyle and shape their identity and position in a society that is obsessed with perfect body image. The loss of a limb can also have an impact on their families as they have to give up their lifestyles and jobs to take care of them as they cannot do things themselves. Society’s subconscious negative towards disabled people and the obsession of being normal could have an influence on the, emotional and psychological well-being of the individual as it could give them a sense of anger, resentment, guilt, self – pity, numbness, sadness and they could even suffer from depression, self body image and suffer from suicidal thoughts. Although cell regeneration is a fascinating, curious topic, it can have a few downfalls such as the economical estimation of how much funding do scientists need in order to conduct more research and experiments on the possibility of regeneration and the actual cost of actually performing the procedure to the people who need it, especially in societies where healthcare is expensive. In the social aspects, this topic can cause a controversial debate and readers will show ambivalent views

Cell Regeneration is still a new discovery which could bring hope in the future and revolutionise our cultural and scientific eyes on medicine. This medical invention could benefit as it will help people lead normal lives and reinstate back to the normal routine than the routine they had when they were disabled and thus, enable to integrate in society and perceived as normal. On the other hand, it can make society worse because this topic illustrates society’s obsession with aesthetic perfectionism and ignores the message that inner appearance shapes our unique identities rather than our outer appearance. If cell regeneration does come into the light of medicine, it could cause conflict within the social hierarchy meaning, those who are above middle class can afford this extraordinary treatment than those who can’t afford it, thus it could lead to social conflict.

Philipkoski, K, (2006),www.wired.com/medtech/genetics/news/2006/09/071817(15th November 2007) 2

Bryner, J, (2006) How Salamanders sprout new limbs, http://www.livescience.com/animals/071101-newt-limbs.html,1st , 15th November 2007 2

Gardiner, DM, Bryant, SV (DRS), (2006), http://regeneration.bio.uci.edul , 15th November 2007 3

Highfield, R (2005) Doctors seek key to regrowing limbs, http://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/main/jhtml-/news/2005/10/12/nregeneration,12.xml ( 2007),  22nd  November 2007

www.wikipedia.com 2, 4,5+ 8

theenglishman101, (2005) A report on Limb regeneration and the history of research,www.bbc/dna/h2g2/A4084030, 3rd December 2007. 2 + 10

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In what ways is our world becoming more globalised, and what are the consequences?

01_04What is Globalization? The word Globalization sends an image of a globe in our minds displaying the world continents that spins around contrasting the colors of blue and green together by a swipe of a finger, diverts us to a nostalgic memory of a typical geography session where we are obliged to remember every country’s capital city, the language they speak and it’s currency. Globalization is an interdependence of how messages and levels of communication are spread world-wide where we see the well-known clothing brands and electrical manufacturers distributed and used in a space of our living rooms, bedrooms to offices and shops to the slums and compounds of economically unhealthy countries. Technology and mass media communication are to credited for the mastermind of globalization especially through advertisements. Although Globalization is something that bring us together, however there could conflicts in race, culture and even in social hierarchies where the filthy rich could be given first class tickets to have access to the latest technologies and gadgets whereas those are way below the poverty are restricted.

The internet is a great tool for sending emails, browsing social networking sites such as Facebook and MySpace to keep in touch with friends we haven’t seen for a long time, the opportunity to meet people rather than waste time finding them or meet people in places we are not known to. We could also go onto encyclopedic websites such as Wikipedia and search engines such as Google and Ask Jeeves to search for topics that spark our interest and expand our knowledge, which are implemented into political debates and group discussions. Alternatively, provide writers and creative artist inspiration to produce future projects or we purchase, sell and exchange products on websites such as eBay and Amazon, where products are traditionally held at auctions at affordable prices compared to prices in high street stores or already purchased products which existed prior to our first entry into the world or something we remember growing up. We could also use the internet to buy, download or watch media materials, such as music, films, radio and television shows in our spare time or catch up with well-known soap operas and TV sitcoms especially story lines that relate to personal experiences and current problems which creates a form of social bond.

Even though the internet is a crucial aid for improving our lifestyles, especially in the development of today’s children, as they can play games and get in touch with their friends and research relevant topics to help with their homework assignments. The downfall is that the internet could put us at risk for developing obsessions and addictions. Customers who use the internet for buying stuff online and for online banking purposes, could put themselves as targets for deception, identity theft and fraud where people can hack into websites to gain customers personal details such as credit cards and bank statements that contain their account numbers. Since the satellite system now behaves as a “Big Brother” surveillance in storing records of our details such as postcodes and address in a national database. Despite this approach, it provides positive benefits, such as how CCTV is embedded in street lights and retail outlets and other areas of social control to aid company’s security and performance and aids our personal welfare so we could easily walk home alone in high confidence without the fear of criminal victimization.

Some people can use the internet for criminal activity, such as downloading, producing and distributing disturbing materials like images of child abuse and go onto chat – rooms in a way to create relationships with vulnerable victims in a process known as online grooming. Some can use the internet for cyber-bullying to harass their victims by making death threats through text messaging, writing emails and produce websites containing fabricating information and disturbing materials to promote hate campaigns. Physical activities include happy slapping, where people film physical violence and pranks on their mobiles and distribute on internet websites particularly You Tube in order to degrade, humiliate vulnerable victims or sometimes use it as a form of emotional blackmail with intent to dominate their victims. Now since cyber crime has gone out of proportion because of  film footages  reveal an increase of anti social behavior and minor crimes ranging from hitting, harassing people, vandalism to serious crimes where people are being set on fire, sexually assaulted and even murdered. This can cause victims to develop mental and emotional distress, leading them to suffer from low self-esteem issues to psychiatric disorders particularly Post-Traumatic Stress Disorder (PTSD).

Migration is not new to Globalization as it derives back to various historical events of migration, such as  the Great Migration to the United States in the Early 1600s, The Great Famine, The Barbarian Invasion in the Roman Empire, The Holocaust, The World Wars, which saw an increase of migration globally in the aftermath and The Great Depression, which saw a shortage of industrial workers. However, migration is forced through the example of the Trans Atlantic Triangle which saw the slaves abducted and transported from Africa to western societies to work on plantation farms. Migrants come in as a family unit, sub-cultural groups or as a single person in hope to seek economical opportunities with the hope to improve their life chances. Common reasons for migration includes receiving medical treatment, better education opportunities, to belong in a community and as part of exchange student programmes and career packages. The advantage of migration is to learn a new language and assimilate into the cultural norms and values the host country has to offer particularly, to take advantage of the healthcare and medical treatments available, whereas it’s not offered in their home countries. Their accent patterns especially in young children are influenced by the different cultures and their adopted environmental setting, giving a sense of identity and belonging. They will be overwhelmed by the opportunity to be educated in an economically healthy country as education is seen as the key to obtaining basic and materialistic wealth in western societies, whereas in other economically deprived societies, education is seen as a lottery ticket to escape the heavy burdens of living in poor conditions where they are at risk for common illnesses caused by poor sanitation.

The negative side of migration is that people who live in foreign countries for a long time are likely to be experience  “culture shock”. This may cause them to endure feelings of anxiety,alienation, bewilderment and struggle to adapt to the norms and value of their adopted countries. People who emigrate especially on their own could experience social and cultural isolation, homesickness and experience vulnerability, especially those who speak little or no adopted languages especially English as this language is predominately spoken and is seen as a ticket to ameliorate job prospects and patterns of communication. Human trafficking is a common globalized crime where people especially young girls and women are lured or kidnapped from Non -English speaking countries to be sexually exploited and coerced into prostitution through false promises of education and guaranteed permanent stay in economically healthy countries. As a result, they could be victims of rape and thus have their emotional and physical needs denied especially testings for pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases which could be passed onto potential clients. In the terms of the labour market, migrants could be seen as targets for resentment by members of their host country for the causes of unemployment and poverty. Simultaneously, become victims of maltreatment, bullying by their work colleagues due to little understanding of the English culture and underpay their wages which may not cover basic need for survival due to subconcious levels of racism. Those who come from predominately Islamic countries are prone will be targeted for racial profiling, exacerbated by the September 11th terrorist attacks and the 7th July bombings in London.

Clothes are produced from economically developed countries but now the production lines are created in poverty-stricken countries. Clothes are were always  imported from countries to countries especially Britain to stores such as Primark, which sell sophisticated clothing at cheap affordable prices. The downfall is that the majority of clothes are produced from garment factories and the majority of the workers are women. They are paid depending on the numbers of clothes they produced based, patterns of  motivation and fast they can work towards deadlines rather than get paid per hour. Basically, it is commission orientated. Even in some cases, the wages are not enough meet the basics needs for survival where western societies take for granted. The working conditions are sometimes poor and dangerous which could increase the workers chances of being involved fatal accidents and suffer injuries which could impact their physical and mental health in the short and long-term and could affect the company’s overall performance and their personal lives and chances for future employment.

Globalization is a phenomenon which continues to grow and is inevitable and could benefit us in the long run and simultaneously, intensify our current circumstances.  The world is becoming more globalised in many ways particularly, in the area of modern technology and communication developed with the ambition to improve our lives nevertheless, went on to be exploited for criminal and illegal purposes. We need globalization in order to experience, explore and experiment with different cultures, norms and values, to educate and create a social bond.

 

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Do we live in a network society?

Network Society and Fashion Magazines – Theories of Media and  Communication: Blog 6The Postmodern Condition: A Report on Knowledge  by Jean Francois Lyotard (1984) is rumored to be the so-called “Self help” book that help us to understand the era of post-modernity. In his book, Jean Francois Lyotard discusses about the idea of knowledge and argues that knowledge is developed through the applications of science and technology. He is considered to be a narrative philosopher who explains things from his experiences and defines postmodernity as “incredulity towards metanarratives”. Incredulity, a disbelief about a fact, a truth moving towards metanarratives. Since the prefix of ‘meta’ derives from Greek meaning ‘beyond’ or ‘behind’ and narrative, a synonym for story, it simply implies that postmodernity is defined as denial about a fact, a truth drifting towards metanarratives, a story beyond a story or story behind a story. To think of a story “behind closed doors” of another story, to think of a story “outside of the box” of another story, or to think of a story about a person behind a facade of another story which can be explained in Erving Goffman’s book The Presentation of the Self in Everyday Life (1990).

He believes that western societies are dominated by science and technology particularly cybernetics, where information is translated into pieces of data which is shared and easily accessible by us. In section 1 entitled: The Field: Knowledge in Computerised Society, he explain that people take advantage of technology to ameliorate their degree of knowledge by listening to information through media and communication, such as newspapers, televisions, radio etc. The purpose in which, he (Lyotard) could explain that technology creates a form of social cohesion via social networking sites, such as Facebook, MySpace and Twitter. Lyotard compares the principle of money to the notion of knowledge as in exchanging degrees of knowledge among subcultures and social classes through agreements and negotiations (Lyotard 1984: 6).

In chapter 2: Legitimization however, Lyotard applies the metaphor “terror” to argue that human beings are easily manipulated by the media influences of consumerism and materialism, and are unconsciously intimidated and coerced into obeying the rules held by authority, especially if the rules considered to be degrading to humanity.  This applies to the rules within transport facilities, where people are obliged to pay transport fees otherwise, they would face the consequences of paying a fine or even face prosecution. In reflection, the hypodermic syringe model can be used to explain that we are injected with the knowledge and terror by the media, those in the position of authority and the norms held in society, and would be  faced by the ‘terror’ on the penalty of ridicule, disapproval and social expulsion rather than the knowledge from our personal experiences and experiences from members within the socialisation process, such as family and friends and knowledge within religion and culture.

Howard Becker, a classical labelling theorist could explain from his book Outsiders, which is rumoured to be the blueprint of the labelling theory to explain that those refuse to conform to the social norms or violate the rules within the social norm, would be branded as ‘deviants’ and be punished by exclusion as an outsider (1963). As a result, Emile Durkheim could argue that those who are excluded from mainstream society may commit one of the four types of suicide: Egoistical suicide, as a result of being excluded from mainstream society as an outsider. Anomic suicide, as a result of society constantly changing and feeling disillusioned and struggling to adjust and adapt with the norms and rules. Altruistic suicide, as a motive to sacrifice one’s life to preserve the social norms and traditions within society and Fatalistic suicide, the result of excessive strictness of the social norms and traditions which are held in society suppressing individualism and personal autonomy (1897).

In section 3, Lyotard moves on to discuss the method, the language game, which he views the social system or social mobility as a game of chess which illustrates that people need to gain knowledge in order to survive the social system or progress from one social hierarchy to another. He argues that people are obliged to assimilate into learning the language and customs of its new culture with the expectation to adapt to their new environment such as the workplace and especially in academic fields, military and religious groups. This mirrors the idiomatic proverb: “When in Rome, do what the Romans do”. In other words, Lyotard simply discusses about survival of the fittest where those survive and play the game well, receive rewards and mentions a single rule can change the whole game. However, some thinkers argue that we develop our own strategies to help us play the game successfully through creativity.

In sections 4 and 5, Lyotard highlights the debate between modernity and post-modernity in the nature of the social bond. In section 4, it reveals that Lyotard has a functionalist lens on modernity which was backed up by Talcott Parsons, another functionalist who argues that society is a self – regulated system. In clarity, people are drifting from a mechanical society where people share the same values, beliefs and norms to an organic society, where members are becoming independent (1967 cited in Lyotard 1984: 11). Lyotard also recommends that ethnography is essential to investigate and observe the behaviour and actions created by individuals in social settings to vindicate whether society is self – regulated. In section 5, Lyotard argues that our position in life and identities are shaped by race, social class and gender along with a certain degree of materialism, meaning our styles in fashion which reflects on the model of social stratification, a hierarchy that determines our position within the social hierarchy and knowledge therefore is only option to give us the opportunity to increase our life chances of being successful, to be promoted from one hierarchy to another and prevent us from falling prey to inequalities and exploitation by the bourgeois.

In sections 6 pragmatics in the narrative form, Lyotard argues that science comes in two versions, first is a subject is determined by an individual’s experience, such as near death experiences or adverse effects and second, a science that consists of a topic provided with a hypothesis and research is conducted in order to vindicate its hypothesis. One example comes to mind is Labelling Theorists Rosenthal and Jacobson’s study of the Pygmalion effect in the classroom (1992) provides a hypothesis that vindicates into a self – fulfilling prophecy. It can be suggested that knowledge contributes to form a social cycle and we are dominated by the knowledge held by the bourgeoisie including members of authority. In the section 7 pragmatics in scientific form, Lyotard argues that scientific knowledge is considered to be hegemonic and dominates other forms of knowledge, as science is based on evidence to prove that whether a certain assumption is true or false. He also highlights that scientists could criticise narratives for developing mentalities among human beings which consists of stereotypes, thus creates prejudice and discrimination (Lyotard 1984: 27). The sentence: “A person does not have to know how to be what knowledge say he is” asserts that our personalities or actions does not have to be dictated by the stereotypes of our social characteristics. This usually applies to the topic, aesthetics where an old fashion wisdom which addresses  poor self – esteem and poor body image: “It does not matter on what you are on the outside, but it’s what you are on the inside that counts” or “Beauty is only skin deep rather than outer perfection”.

In sections 8, The narrative of function and the legitimation of knowledge, Lyotard argues that legitimation is itself an issue rather than the language game of science where rules are constantly changing and people have difficulties of obeying the rules. For example, it can be argued this chapter reveals debates on how we should develop  mannerisms, personalities and behaviours to adjust to the new rules. It can be suggested that the ruling class can define what is normal or abnormal, in regards of values, personality traits and our ways of looking at social changes. Doland and Maschler (1969 cited in Lyotard 1984: 30) argued that legitimation is considered as a contract among the legislators and social progress is seen as the outcome of the rich and those are in the position of authority that created these so-called “social norms”.

In chapter 9, The narratives of the legitimation of knowledge, Lyotard argues that everyone has the right to have access to science and knowledge regardless of race, gender, religion, social class etc. It can be suggested that the last sentence gives some readers the impression that he (Lyotard) has liberal views and believes in equality. He argues that laws serve the interest of the rich and powerful and the legitimators such as the government and citizens are passive and have no choice but to follow the rules which are set by the state. This mirrors the hypodermic syringe model drawing a parallel to the Marxist lens that we are injected by the rules that serves the interests of the bourgeoisie rather than our own rules and personal boundaries. In the section 10, Delegitimation, Lyotard argues that narrative knowledge has been rejected and the launch of technology was seen as the aftermath of the Second World War which motivated academic writers to concentrate on the motives rather than actions caused by individuals and the state. He also argues that issues in the private sphere were ignored, particularly within the home, such as child abuse and domestic violence and concerns of institutional discrimination based on race, gender and sexuality.

In chapter 11, Education and its legitimation through performativity, Lyotard argues that higher education is seen as the best antidote to improve social progress and performativity of the social hierarchy as higher education provides us the tools to meet the criteria held in society and the ability to preserve social bonds. He also discusses that technology and media communications such as the internet, email facilities are replacing traditional teaching systems and data banks as they are considered as the “encyclopedia of tomorrow”. In other words, technology is the way forward. However, he argues that if education provides the reproduction of skills among social progress, then it follows into the transmission of knowledge. Marxist writers can argue that education can cause inequalities among social classes as the members from upper class backgrounds can enter higher education whereas their lower class counterparts cannot.

In chapter 12, Postmodern science as the search for instabilities, Lyotard notes that theories emphasises the creation of new motives and new rules for the language game. For example, scientific knowledge is now looking for answers and the hypothesis is now dominated by actions and means of the individual’s place in society. He highlights Brillouin’s argument in which he concludes that there is conflict between the addressee and sender and people begin to rebel against society’s expectations (Lyotard 1984: 55).  Friedrich Nietzsche could explain this through the notion of ressentiment (resentment) and argue that rebellion symbolises the outcome of resentment fuelled by the mistreatment of slaves by their masters and is perceived as a creative force, only in their imagination because they were deprived of physical resources to rebel as it could imply they were unconsciously subdued by injection of terror by their master’s superiority in the dominant space (1887). According to Robert Merton (1957), it arouses Rebellion, one of the five responses, adaptations to anomie, where people are rejecting the shared cultural goals and means of achieving held in mainstream society and create their own goals, their levels of knowledge and their own means of achieving.

Lyotard mentions that some social systems have boundaries including social norms that modify which behaviour is considered normal or deviant (Lyotard 1984: 59).  In the final chapter, Legitimation by Paralogy, Lyotard assesses two of Luhmann’s argument on systems theory: The first one illustrates that the system can only function by reducing complexity. For clarity, individuals will be able to function in society if certain barriers which prevent them from achieving the shared cultured goal such as the American Dream or their personal goals are removed. It implies that discrimination towards race, social class, gender, disability and sexism and those live below the poverty line ought to be dealt with by charitable organizations, campaign groups and anti – discriminatory policies. 

The second argument displays that the system should be adjusted to meet the aspirations of the players’ personal expectations rather than the aspirations that favours the interest of the ruling class and the norms held in mainstream society (Luhmann 1969 cited in Lyotard 1984: 61). Lyotard also argues that performativity criterion has its own advantages where stories are rejected and replaced by definitions of real meaning and players of the game should take responsibility for the statements they propose and more importantly, the rules of those statements (Lyotard 1984: 62). He also highlights what Luhmann describes terrorist behaviour in the social system and in the language game. He explains that if a player enters the game with a higher level of knowledge, would become a threat to other members within the game and as a result, insecurities will rise among them which converts into jealously as the motivate to take certain measures to degrade and eventually eliminate that player out of the game mainly by bullying in overt and mostly covert forms (Lyotard 1984: 63 – 4).

Some writers feel that Jean Francois Lyotard’s book is considered to be a stepping stone in shifting from modernity to postmodernity, or a “self-help” guide for the audience to understand postmodernism. However, he (Lyotard) has been subjected to many controversial debates both negative and positive. Alex Callinicos criticised Lyotard’s definition of postmodern for lacking in clarification which causes conflict among many writers. He (Callinicos) also argues that Lyotard’s book the postmodern condition rejects the objectivity of socialist revolutions (Callinicos 1989: 3). He also illustrated that Lyotard’s discussion of metanarratives which is an individual form of knowledge in pre-modern societies, such as folk tales which Lyotard argues that they consist of experiences which are characterised by self – legitimation, meaning that narrators can make their own rules of the game (Callinicos 1989: 93).

Zygmunt Bauman however, argues that Lyotard describes postmodernism in the notion of hegemony which is argued that science tend to dominate all forms of knowledge and rules in the language game (Bauman 1992: 35). He (Bauman) also discussed that Lyotard also presented that hegemony is starting to erode in its power, is beginning to effect the disintegration of science (Bauman 1992: 35). He (Bauman) also mentions that language games are the outcomes of the separation of the communicative field from the structure of economics and politics and additionally, the breakdown of hierarchical functions within the social system. Language games are also burdened by other means not only legitimation, which of course is the main issue but the act of terror where rules are easily broken because people are rebelling against the traditional rules which conformed by the social norm by setting their own form of rules (Bauman 1992: 38).

Foucault on the other hand, from his book Discipline and Punish (Valier 2003: 152) highlighted that knowledge and power are related and cannot be separated as these two notions are viewed in which Lyotard could explain as the best form of teamwork to resist the two infections of “fear” and “terror”, and aid social progress and self change which can be applied to weight loss by arguing “there is no diet without exercise and there is no exercise without diet”, highlighting the antidote of self-discipline. Valier (2003: 152 – 3) on the other hand, argues that knowledge and power are exploited for other means such as punishment mainly corporal, which is supported by the Journal entitled: Power without Knowledge: Foucault and Fordism.c1900 – 50, is an example on the exploitation of knowledge and power for other means and Lyotard’s explanation on the metaphor “terror” is used on the assembly line of the Ford Motor Factory. It was revealed that since the early 1920s the Ford foreman had to adapt to the language learnt in that environment by displaying an aggressive and harsh attitude towards his workers in order to enhance the performance in the production line.

Williams, Haslam and Williams (1993 cited in Coopey and McKinlay 2010: 112) and Cruden (1926 cited in Coopey and McKinlay 2010: 112) argued that the workers were subjected to verbal abuse, incremented by the use of coercion, physical threats and intimidation. Foucault defines this term of auto labour as dressage where the workers were seen as slaves to the foremen, who uses gestures and fear to intimidate the workers with the intention to aid progression in the modes of production (Foucault 1997 cited in Coopey and McKinlay 2010: 112). This example of the brutal treatment of the assembly workers illustrates that power and knowledge are exploited for the company’s own purpose additionally, reveals the issue of hegemony, in terms of the foreman have full authority over the assembly workers.

Paul Terry illustrates that  Jurgen Habermas explores the notion of knowledge in three fields, analytical, hermeneutic and critical in opposition to the Kantian spheres of science, aesthetics and morality (Terry 1997: 270). He (Terry) also argue that these models Habermas highlighted relates to human interests in a unique way, for example, observation can be more effective through the applications of science and technology which lies beneath analytical knowledge and historical and cultural interests are concentrated on hermeneutically – derived knowledge. He also argues that those three concepts of knowledge can be applied in natural sciences or mathematics beneath the analytical – empirical sphere and hermeneutics can be related to humanities and critical knowledge can be applied in the interests of emancipation from authority (Habermas 1971 cited in Terry 1997: 271). He argues that Habermas sees the duplication of the social realm as a struggle between economics, administration and bureaucracy and the language game can be seen as an instrument to achieve the means of attaining a balanced and reasonable agreement, seeing neutrality as the key to aid conflicts (Terry 1997: 273). He also mentions that Habermas views modernity as a democratic society and as an unfinished project. Nevertheless, he (Habermas) sees postmodernity being obsessed with power and legitimacy. Habermas’s work has been later criticised for being over – theoretical mentioning the use of scientific applications and believes practicality is needed to vindicate these assumptions. (Terry 1997: 274).

Education was considered in many perspectives as a key to improve social reproduction and to maintain cultural perspectives. Offe (1984 cited in Terry 2010: 275) argues that higher education is inevitable in increasing our degree of knowledge and levels of empathizing power in political and economic views. Terry, on the other hand suggests that educators must adapt to inevitable changes in culture (Terry 2010: 275). Anthony Giddens who is renowned for this major theories systems of ideas – the structural theory which was initiated in 1984, which concentrates on social customs that revolves around space and time, and is essential for social systems and social acts performed by human beings and the late modernity theory which concentrate on the conditions of social world that constantly changes and argues from a postmodern view, that modernity is abolished by social and cultural order (Faulkheimer 2007: 288 – 9). It is suggested that Lyotard’s method, the language game can be used to help us to adapt to the new form of social and cultural orders. Faulkheimer (2007: 289) believes that scientific reason causes the risk society and it can implied that risk minimization in the criminal justice system stems from that assumption. He (Giddens) highlighted that risk diverse in two ways: external risk which associates with nature causes such as floods and earthquakes and the second risk associates with manufactured risks in terms of global warming, risks which associate with our everyday lives, such as transportation and information communication technology (Giddens 2002 cited in Faulkheimer 2007: 289).

Barbara Ann Strassberg argues from her journal Religion and Science: The Embodiment of the Conversation: A Postmodern Sociological Perspective, that knowledge comes in two ways. Faith, which does not need to be vindicated by scientific investigation through experimentation and belief needs to be backed up by scientific proof (2001:525). This statement can be criticised for ignoring that faith and science are connected and cannot be separated, which can reflect Foucault’s link of Power and Knowledge by arguing that “there is no faith without science and there is no science without faith “. Max Weber and those with Weberian views may explain that religion symbolises the notion of Karma where Lyotard explains this in the first chapter where we donate our levels of knowledge to those who are unfortunate with intention we will be rewarded with new and revised versions of knowledge. Karma has been applied in moral teachings where for example, if we treat strangers or fellow neighbours good or bad, we will be given the same action in return.

However, the subject on religion can be exploited through the example mentioned in Power without Knowledge: Foucault and Fordism, can be used to explain that religious leaders could exploit religion for their own interests, manifested from carrying out fraud and deception to subjecting people to psychological manipulation and abuse which is practiced in religious cults and subcultures. Marxist thinkers can criticize that religion symbolizes dominance of the bourgeoisie over the proletarians. Imaginatively, religion is argued to be viewed as the symbol of  “perfect obedience” by creating a slave master morality by injecting the fear of God into our minds that he will punish us if we intent to engage in sinful acts which violates the biblical rules from the bible.

Reminiscent by the sentence:  “A person does not have to know on how to be what knowledge say he is” Lyotard mentions about our actions, decisions, personalities and behaviour does not have to be determined by the knowledge comes in the form of what stereotypes say about us is similar to the subject of psychology where, psychodynamic theorists like Sigmund Freud through his study of the unconscious mind could argue that past experiences preferably in childhood and adolescence can influence our behavior and responses to certain stimulus in later life. Whereas in opposition, humanistic psychologists such as Abraham Maslow and Carl Rogers argue that human beings have the freedom of choice to take responsibility for their happiness, their reactions to external stimulus which are beyond their control and be accountable for the consequences created by their free will. One example is that we should not allow ourselves to be dictated by the knowledge based on negative stereotyping on race, gender, class and disabilities and past adverse experiences held by the ruling class and our chances of succeeding academically and financially should be not be determined by our position in the social hierarchy but determined by our own freedom of choice.

Furthermore, on the subject of criminology, classical thinkers like Ceasre Beccaria and Jeremy Betham may argue that people engage in criminality by their exploitation of free will rather than external negative influences which in opposition, positivists criminologists like Andre Guerry and Adolphe Quetelet with the use of statistical data may argue along with Chicago Scholar Ernest Burgess from his illustration on the  Zones of Transition (1925), that crime is committed by those living in dilapidated slums of inner city regions. Strain Theorist Robert Merton (1957) who revised Durkheim’s anomie can explain criminality stems from the frustration of not accomplishing the American Dream based on materialistic wealth.

The graph from the home office downloaded from the  home office  website (http://rds.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs2/s95race02) illustrates the over-representation of black offenders . These were drawn upon the narratives of stereotypes which can be agreed with Lyotard who explains this in chapter 7. Black young men people are stereotyped as deviant, aggressive, trouble makers and academic “underachievers” by educational institutions. On reference to the relationship of race and post – modernity, Brett St Louis applies the concept of Foucault’s theme of power/knowledge onto the notions about race where he highlights that Stuart Hall suggests a new emergence of a new ethnicity where black people are oppressed by the knowledge and negative stereotypical perceptions held by the minds of the hegemonic white society (1992 cited in St Louis 2009: 656). He (St Louis) also argues ethnicity is manufactured socially where race was considered to be biological (2009: 659) which can be agreed with Alain Locke who argues that the biological meaning of race has been ended and the sociological meaning of race is starting to expand (1992 cited in St Louis 2009: 665) in areas of culture and socio – economical backgrounds.

In conclusion, postmodernism appears to be the heart of discourse and is criticized for neglecting concerns that focus on technology. However, from the works discussed by renowned writers vindicates with Jean Francois Lyotard’s hypothesis that we do live in a network society where knowledge is decoded into data and delivered in various formats such as, communications, technology and particularly the media . We live in a world that is constantly changing and the language game is highlighted as the vital tool that help us to adapt and assimilate to the changes made in society and it is applied in many areas of the social world from technology, science to race, class and gender.

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http://rds.homeoffice.gov.uk/rds/pdfs2/s95race02.pdf (accessed 17th January 2011).

Lyotard & My Fear for New Humans (nobyeni.wordpress.com)

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