Newsflash! The American dream is in crisis! The US has a problem with childhood poverty! According to the National Center for Children in Poverty, 22 per cent of American children live below the poverty line and 45 per cent live in (very) low-income families. It鈥檚 not news, but it鈥檚 also not on the political agenda.
Who better, then, to launch a聽child poverty campaign than Robert Putnam, the poster boy for 鈥渁cademic impact鈥? In the wake of his 2000 book Bowling Alone: The Collapse and Revival of American Community, he helped a little-known senator from Illinois, Barack Obama, establish the importance of community organisations, and this would prove to be a winning political strategy.
Presumably, when President Obama worried in 2009 that the economic crisis was 鈥渓ike the American Dream in reverse鈥, Putnam began writing this book. Long before its publication, he carried its message to Washington鈥檚 leaders on both sides of the political divide 鈥 not just Obama, but Republican Rand Paul, too. Our Kids challenges candidates to resuscitate an American dream, or at least to debate the opportunities gap between rich and poor. The intention here is a well-timed political intervention.
Unfortunately, the outcome is a contrived and highly derivative ode to Putnam鈥檚 childhood: from the opening line (鈥淢y hometown was, in the 1950s, a passable embodiment of the American Dream鈥) to his heartfelt introductions of fellow 1959 high school graduates of Port Clinton, Ohio, whose stories of success bear witness to his premise that in post-war America, class did not impede social mobility.
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Our Kids cherry-picks contemporary sociological and psychological research to demonstrate how working-class children from broken homes now have little chance of success, loosely interwoven with a few dozen original qualitative interviews with teenagers and their parents. Peppered throughout the book, these stories are intended to illustrate 鈥渢iger parenting鈥, 鈥渘eglect鈥, 鈥渆arly childhood development鈥, 鈥渢oxic stress鈥 and so on. Isabella and Sofia, Andrew and Kayla are presented as contrasting binary tales of the 鈥渞ich鈥 upper third and the 鈥減oor鈥 lower third of society. They represent the stagnation of social mobility for the next generation in cities across the US, including Port Clinton. The familiar us/them construction gives voice to Putnam鈥檚 worry about a loss of communal concern for 鈥渙ur kids鈥 as the poor turn into 鈥渢heir kids鈥.
What? There have always been 鈥渢heir kids鈥. Framing childhood poverty as a crisis of a 1950s American dream merely offers a nostalgic narrative of a time that was mired in social structures of patriarchy and racism. That American dream worked for white men. Even James Truslow Adams, who coined the phrase in 1931, realised that the 鈥淣egro鈥 would never be a part of the American dream. Putnam recalls the words of Jesse, his 1959 African-American classmate: 鈥淵our then was not my then, and your now isn鈥檛 even my now.鈥 But the book consistently downplays the effects of racism in favour of a (pro-capitalist) class analysis.
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Searching for causes of the crisis, Putnam links problematic shifts in family structures to the Pill, the feminist revolution and women鈥檚 employment. Women are the culprit. With his evidence carefully laid 鈥 single parenthood, divorce, working mothers 鈥 we discover when the dream ended. Undoubtedly, changes in family structure have had a significant impact on experiences of childhood. But it is unforgivable that Putnam fails to contextualise such changes with the dystopia lived by many women who, in the 1950s, were considered the property of their husbands, trapped in violent relationships without legal recourse to divorce, and unable to work or to gain economic independence. There are reasons things change.
What can be done for poor kids? Putnam offers a promising 鈥渕enu of complementary approaches鈥: more parental leave; flexible working; affordable, good-quality daycare; wraparound family services; more investment in schools; and direct interventions to shore up families 鈥 lowering teen pregnancy rates, expanding child tax credit, making direct payments to poor families and reducing incarceration rates.
The far more pressing political question is: how do we engender an American dream for 2015? 鈥淥ur kids鈥 need stable homes, family dinners together, good schools, community mentors and equal opportunities. However, solutions must tackle intersectional problems of sexism, racism and class.
Viewing 鈥渙ur kids鈥 through the lens of memoir or banal academic research is a disappointment. The black kids in Ferguson and Baltimore, and the targets of the Republicans鈥 鈥渨ar on women鈥, deserve better. As a political intervention, I hope this book serves as a springboard to finding solutions for 2015 rather than an opportunity for American political leadership to socially engineer 鈥渙ur kids鈥 back to 1959.
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Angelia R. Wilson is professor of politics, University of Manchester.
Our Kids: The American Dream in Crisis
By Robert D. Putnam
Simon & Schuster, 400pp, 拢18.99 and 拢11.99
ISBN 9781476769899 and 9912 (e-book)
Published 9 April 2015
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