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Urban life & experience. What is it to be “civilized”. From Latin: civis = citizen Civic, civilization, civilize, city, civility. What’s in a word?. What’s the common thread?
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What is it to be “civilized” From Latin: civis = citizen Civic, civilization, civilize, city, civility
What’s in a word? • What’s the common thread? • These English words reflect the long association between the idea of the city and the idea of some kind of refinement of thought or behavior • The association is as old as the Roman empire: • the Romans saw cities as the way to spread a certain way of life, and they systematically planted cities throughout their empire
Lifeworlds • Ways of being • Ways of seeing • Ways of knowing • Shaped by personal experience through daily routines in particular places at particular times • Urban lifeworlds are very different from rural lifeworlds, leading to: • predictable changes in attitudes and outlook • enduring political divides between urban & rural areas
Sociospatial Dialectic • Two-way road • City Inhabitants • a dialecticis a mutually-defining opposition • How did urbanization shape the human mind, body, and social world? • How does a person shape the city?
Dancing in the Street! What’s so civilized about this?
To be “civilized” • Emotional-psychological responses • You take for granted encounters with strangers • You become tolerant of difference • You accept impersonal forms of social coordination (e.g. walk-signals, laws, regulations) • You accept a wide range of specialized authorities (police, doctors, EMS, bouncers, librarians, etc.) • Your extended family probably takes a back seat to a wide range of non-family social ties • You think of yourself in terms of “what you do” which means a specialized job or profession • You internalize certain spatial patterns (e.g. gridiron street layouts or freeway interchanges)
To be “civilized” • Physical-biological impacts • You live longer than hunter-gatherers and early farmers • You are protected from wild animals, many bugs, and some (but not all!) natural hazards & therefore • Your food supplies are more secure, leading to less malnutrition but also a struggle against obesity • Your health suffers in “special” urban ways • Noise pollution can affect your tension levels, sleep patterns, concentration, etc. • Air pollution affects your eyes, lungs & brain • Urban jobs can cause you to physically atrophy • Urban routines (colonization of night for leisure) can affect your sleep cycles • Your reproductive choices are greatly multiplied, which leads to better health over many generations • You internalize particular ways of moving (e.g. driving a car, a bike, a motorcycle, walking a certain way …)
Your impact on the city How do these impacts differ?
Your impact on the city • Environmental degradation • Pollution in “ordinary ways” such as • Human wastes • Solid waste • Driving • maintaining a lawn • Using mass transit or driving • Pollution in “deviant ways” • Graffiti & vandalism • Contribution to various establishments • Renting/owning property housing market • Purchasing goods & services retail/service sector • Working urban economy • Going to school economic specialization • Participation in a “community” • Contribution to the maintenance of urban social norms, beliefs, attitudes, expectations, etc. • Violation of some people’s standards some of the time
What does the “urban community” mean to you? Duties vs. responsibilities?
Late 19th c. theories of urban society • Ferdinand Tönnies • Emile Durkheim: • Mechanical vs. organic solidarity • Anomie (normlessness) • Deviance (e.g. suicide) • Georg Simmel: (way of life) • Apathy, privacy, display
Louis Wirth (early 20th c.) • Population numbers, density and heterogeneity shape urbanites: • Withdrawn, aloof, brusque, impersonal • Egocentric & selfish • Idiosyncratic • Social segregation (by groups) • Social fragmentation (of lifeworld) • Lack of social support except for impersonal (and less adequate) forms of support • Vulnerable to neurosis, chemical abuse, and other forms of deviance
What is your definition of “deviant”? “The Castro” San Francisco (a gay enclave)
Dilemmas • In either case, the city raises difficult moral and ethical issues • What can be done? • How much can be done? • What is the best means of addressing “urban pathologies”? • What are urban pathologies and what are lifestyle choices? • Homelessness • Drug addiction • Prostitution • Homosexuality
Tolerance levels rising • Are we still changing as a society to reflect our urbanized lifestyle? • To what degree are international hostilities against “Americanization” just the result of rural values around the world resisting urban values? • To what degree are American politics driven by the urban-rural divide within this country?
A different view… Mapped by county, with size proportional to population
Different interpretations of the urban problem • To some, the problem is that morally unacceptable behaviors proliferate and reinforce one another in the city (conservative view) • The problem is a matter of individual failure • People are free to do what they want, and therefore their suffering proves that they have failed • State as the preserver of social order (Right wing) • To others, the problem is that people too easily fall through the cracks in the city (liberal view) • The problem is a matter of structural inadequacy • Implied solutions include redistributing money from the wealthy and the corporations to the poor • State as safety net (Left wing)
Summary • Urban social life (urbanism) is distinct from the social life of the tribe or village • The concept of “civilization” derives from the social and psychological transformations produced by urban life • Deep social ties founded in kinship decline • Shallow, temporary ties based on specialized skills and interests increase • Morality becomes more relativistic and tolerant • Social norms become weaker while people also become more tolerant of differences • Judgments regarding urban “pathologies” are not unanimous • At one extreme “anything goes” • At the other extreme anything other than the white, nuclear family is “deviant”