Poverty and Shame: Global Experiences

Poverty and Shame: Global Experiences

ISBN-10:
0199686726
ISBN-13:
9780199686728
Pub. Date:
02/04/2015
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0199686726
ISBN-13:
9780199686728
Pub. Date:
02/04/2015
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
Poverty and Shame: Global Experiences

Poverty and Shame: Global Experiences

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Overview

Poverty and Shame: Global Experiences explores Nobel laureate Amartya Sen's contention that shame lies at the absolutist core of poverty. It draws on a wealth of empirical evidence to demonstrate how paying greater attention to the psychological and social consequences of poverty provides new insights into how poverty is perpetuated. Based on research in seven very different global contexts, it reveals how, irrespective of whether people live above or below a designated poverty line, in cultures as diverse as rural India, Uganda and Pakistan, urban/suburban UK, China, Norway and South Korea, the ability to participate in society as a full and recognised citizen is largely contingent on having the material resources deemed normal for that society. When such means are not available, the common response is to feel inadequate and to save face by withdrawing to varying degrees from society. Such a response further limits opportunities to exit poverty and arguably results in perpetuating its cycle. Yet society in turn plays a fundamental role in what we term the poverty-shame nexus, by persistently evaluating others against dominant norms and expectations and prioritising certain explanations of poverty over others. Hence shame in relation to poverty is co-constructed, a dynamic interaction of internally felt inadequacies and externally inflicted judgements.

This book, together with the companion volume The Shame of Poverty by Robert Walker invites readers to question conventional understandings about poverty and its impact. In so doing, the volumes provide a foundation for a more satisfactory global conversation about the phenomenon of poverty than that which has hitherto been frustrated by disagreement about whether poverty is best conceptualised in absolute or relative terms.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199686728
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 02/04/2015
Pages: 336
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.20(h) x 3.60(d)

About the Author

Elaine Chase, Research Officer, University of Oxford,Grace Bantebya-Kyomuhendo, Professor, Makerere University, Uganda

Elaine Chase is a Research Officer at the Oxford Institute of Social Policy and a Research Fellow at Green Templeton College, University of Oxford. Her research interests include the sociological dimensions of poverty, migration, social exclusion, rights and wellbeing. She has conducted research and written widely on these themes from a UK and international perspective and with a particular focus on young people and communities most likely to face marginalisation and disadvantage.


Grace Bantebya-Kyomuhendo is a Professor in the School of Women and Gender Studies at Makerere University, Uganda, and is a distinguished social anthropologist and an experienced trainer/lecturer, researcher and advocate for gender equality and social transformation. Grace has done extensive research in poverty and social exclusion , gender poverty and social transformation, Reproductive Health, in particular maternal health, HIV/AIDs in conflict situation. She has also researched on women and ICT and Gender and climate change. She has published widely, most recent being a co-authored book entitled Women, Work and Domestic Virtue in Uganda which got an award from African Studies Association.

Table of Contents

1. Introduction, Elaine Chase & Grace Bantebya-KyomuhendoSection 1: Cultural conceptions of poverty and shame: Preface, Elaine Chase2. Oral Tradition and Literary Portrayals of Poverty; the Evolution of Poverty Shame in Uganda, Grace Bantebya-Kyomuhendo3. The Wealth of Poverty-induced Shame in Urdu Literature, Sohail Anwar Choudhry4. Film and literature as social commentary in India, Leemamol Mathew & Sony Pellissery5. Poverty and shame in Chinese literature, Ming Yan6. Poverty and shame: seeking cultural cues within British literature and film, Elaine Chase, Robert Walker & Sohail Anwar Choudhry7. Disclosing the poverty-shame nexus within popular films in South Korea ( 1975-2010), Yongmie Nicola Jo8. 'Then' and 'now': Literary representatio nof shame, poverty and social exclusion in Norway, Erika GubriumSection 2 : Experiences of poverty and shame in seven countries: Preface, Elaine Chase9. 'Needy and vulnerable, but poverty is not my identity': Experiences of people in poverty in Uganda, Grace Bantebya- Kyomuhendo10. Tales of inadequacey from Pakistan, Sohail Anwar Choudhry11. 'I am not alone' : Experience sof poverty induced shame in a moral economy, Sony Pellissery & Leemamol Mathew12. Experiences of poverty and shame in urban China, Ming Yan13. The 'shame' of shame: experiences of people living in poverty in Britain, Elaine Chase & Robert Walker14. Social isolation and poverty in South Korea: A manifestation of the poverty-shame nexus, Yongmie Nicola Jo & Robert Walker15. Relative poverty in a rich, egalitarian welfare state: Experiences from Norway, Erika Gubrium & Ivar LodemelSection 3: The role of media and society in the construction of poverty-related shame : Preface, Elaine Chase16. Poverty the invisible and inseparable 'shadow': Reflections from the media and the better off in rural Uganda, Amon Ashaba Mwiine & Grace Bantebya-Kyomuhendo17. How best to shame those in poverty: Perspectives from Pakistan, Sohail Anwar Choudhry18. Persistence of shaming in hierarchical society: The case of India, Sony Pellissery & Leemamol Mathew19. Society and shaming: General public and media perceptions of poverty in urban China, Ming Yan20. Constructing reality?: The 'discursive truth' of poverty in Britain and how it frames the experience of shame, Elaine Chase & Robert Walker21. 'No one should be poor': Social Shaming in Norway, Erika Gubrium22. Poverty and shame: the future, Elaine Chase and Grace Bantebya -Kyomuhendo
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