Saturday, August 31, 2013

First Seminar Thoughts and new attitude towards writing for class

Hello Everyone,

I just wanted to say I am genuinely excited for this class based on the brief discussions we have had so far.  Out of our conversation about the homage that was A Kind of Genius: Herb Sturz and Society’s Toughest Problems, we discussed the unreliability of Statistics (both Qualitative and Quantitative), whether someone can truly be non-ideological and the “stakeholders” who supposedly benefitted from the work of the genius we know as Herb Sturz.  Through the latter speaking topic of stakeholders, we see that the question of who benefitted from his work would bring unsure and somewhat unflattering answers about the effects of Sturz’s work.  The book never mentions where the homeless go after they have been cleaned up and the neighborhoods they once dwelled are no longer affordable to live in.  Page 190 exemplifies the concept of gentrification in the two picture comparisons that referred to the minority men as derelicts (a problematic term which is reminiscent of when President Bush called African Americans in New Orleans “refugees” after Hurricane Katrina). This idea brought me back to when Professor Stein mentioned in class that with every empire, like the one Herb Sturz has built with Vera, there is colonization. 

I personally was tentative about mentioning the ideas of gentrification, but after the underlying issues we were able to bring about in class, I feel like I could have written a much better paper after Thursday.  With this in mind, I will definitely push myself in my writing to question even the best of examples of successful initiatives in social justice as Sturz has accomplished.

With that I leave you with a short video that talks about the setbacks of gentrification that started in the Lower East Side as told by filmmaker and Brooklyn native, Spike Lee.

-Spencer


Friday, August 30, 2013

Welcome!

If you are reading this, you have made it to the blog site!  May this be the hardest thing you have to do this semester!  Many thanks to all of you for a great start to the seminar yesterday and to Spencer for leading us in conversation this week.