Gans, Herbert J.
Gans, Herbert J. 1927-
BIBLIOGRAPHY
Herbert J. Gans was born in Cologne, Germany, in 1927. He escaped the worst of the Nazi Occupation, moving first to England in 1938 and then to the United States in 1940, becoming an American citizen in 1945. After graduating from the University of Chicago in 1950 with an MA in sociology and social science, Gans worked for three years with public and private agencies as a planner of two new towns. In 1953 he turned to academia, receiving his PhD from the University of Pennsylvania in 1957 and advancing to the position of associate professor of urban studies by 1964. Between 1964 and 1969, Gans worked as a research associate for the Institute for Urban Studies and Planning at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology. In 1971 he became a professor of sociology at Columbia University, and in 1985 he became the Robert S. Lynd Professor at Columbia. In 1989 he served as president of the American Sociological Association, and he received the association’s Public Understanding of Sociology Award in 1999.
Gans’s research and teaching activities have been largely concentrated in the area of urban sociology. Committed to the social-scientific method of participant observation, his first book, The Urban Villagers (1962), was a study of an Italian American neighborhood in Boston. Gans noted how economic terms such as underclass had evolved into judgments of moral value attached to the poor in society. From his analysis, Gans concluded that the various forms of social problems associated with poor neighborhoods were not a cultural characteristic of the people who lived there, but rather a direct result of the social and economic circumstances of their poverty. This was to be a recurrent theme in Gans’s writings, emerging powerfully in a later work, The War against the Poor (1995), in which he analyzed the social, psychological, and political reasons that Americans continue to seek to indict millions of poor citizens as “undeserving.”
The Levittowners (1967) focused specifically upon the origin and quality of suburban life, including its effects on human behavior. Gans then moved on to challenge the supposed universality of high cultural standards in Popular Culture and High Culture (1974). An outspoken advocate of cultural pluralism, Gans pointed out that the alleged convergence of high culture and popular culture could not be empirically sustained, because the lifestyle choices of middle-class and working-class social groups remained divergent. This concern with how various social groups make decisions informed his next publication, Deciding What’s News (1979), in which he looked at the impact of news agendas on individual decision-making and the shaping of a nation’s self-image. He returned to this theme in Democracy and the News (2003), arguing that a news media manipulated by private corporations threatens to undermine the basic foundations of American democracy by failing to properly inform its citizenry.
One of Gans’s most influential concepts is “symbolic ethnicity,” which refers to a nostalgic allegiance to an ethnic culture, typically of an immigrant generation, that can be felt without having to be frequently incorporated into everyday life practices. Symbolic ethnicity is thus about feeling ethnic, without necessarily being so.
A second influential idea is the “function of poverty,” and Gans will be remembered for the controversy that this idea created. Gans argues that poverty satisfies a number of positive functions for many nonpoor groups in American society—such as carrying out the essential low-paid work that others will not undertake. Though he has controversially associated poverty with positive functions in this way, Gans maintains that recognizing this does not mean that poverty should, or must, continue to exist.
SEE ALSO Democracy; Ethnic Enclave; Ethnicity; Functionalism; Journalism; Poverty; Suburban Sprawl; Suburbs; Urban Studies
Gans, Herbert J. 1962. The Urban Villagers: Group and Class in the Life of Italian-Americans. New York: Free Press.
Gans, Herbert J. 1995. The War Against the Poor: The Underclass and Antipoverty Policy. New York: Basic Books.
Mark Davis
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Melvin Calvin Dies at 85; Won Nobel in Chemistry
Newspaper article from: The Washington Post; 1/12/1997; 523 words
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Newspaper article from: The Milwaukee Journal Sentinel; 4/18/1996; ; 700+ words
; ...s Mickey Petty, the second-place finisher, ran at UWM. Melvin Kinlow of Marshall won the first City Conference 2-mile title...also won conference and sectional titles in cross country. Calvin Dallas ran for Milwaukee Washington but blossomed after he
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Newspaper article from: New York Beacon, The; 5/7/1997; 700+ words
; ...of himself to those in need. Harold J. Melvin leaves sorrowfully: his wife, Ovelia McDaniels Melvin,; two daughters, Blondell and Trudy...Derrick and Harold, Jr., one brother, Calvin Melvin; one sister, Jackie Melvin; two aunts...
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Newspaper article from: Telegram & Gazette (Worcester, MA); 2/16/2007; 418 words
; SPENCER Loretta L. Leroux Melvin, 71 of Clearwater, Florida, formerly...She was predeceased by her husband Calvin C. Melvin who died in 2003. She is survived...Linda Roberts of Spencer, Cynthia Melvin of Millbury, Karen Parker of Holden...
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Newspaper article from: Sentinel, The (Stoke-on-Trent UK); 6/6/2009; ; 700+ words
; ...Blackpool on September 26. The Melvin brothers, Matt Stevenson and...Hotel) v Darren Carter; Mark Melvin (Middleport Park) v Neil Worthington...Tideswell (Middleport Park) v Calvin Jackson; Joe Melvin (Middleport Park) v Paul Chamberlain...
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Newspaper article from: Daily Record, The Wooster, OH; 4/7/2008; ; 400 words
; ...robertsfuneralhome.com. Melvin was born Dec. 28, 1922, in...1945. She died in 1993. Melvin worked for Rubbermaid for 22...AM and enjoyed traveling. Melvin will be deeply missed by his...of Kalamazoo, Mich., and Calvin Hites of Kettering; four grandchildren...
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Magazine article from: Science News; 8/9/1986; ; 700+ words
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Calvin, Melvin
Book article from: Plant Sciences
Calvin, Melvin American Biochemist1911-1997 Melvin Calvin was a biochemist whose prolific career included fundamental...George B. Kauffman Bibliography Bassham, James A., and Melvin Calvin. The Path of Carbon in Photosynthesis. Upper Saddle...
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Melvin Calvin
Encyclopedia entry from: Encyclopedia of World Biography
Melvin Calvin American chemist Melvin Calvin (born 1911) did research that yielded important discoveries...metal-organic chemistry to the chemical origin of life. Melvin Calvin was born in St. Paul, Minnesota, on April 8, 1911, to...
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Calvin cycle
Book article from: A Dictionary of Biology
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Photosynthesis
Book article from: Chemistry: Foundations and Applications
...the dark cycle are collectively called the Calvin cycle, named after American chemist Melvin Calvin who along with his coworkers determined the...during the late 1940s and early 1950s. The Calvin cycle essentially has two stages. In the...
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life
Book article from: The Columbia Encyclopedia, Sixth Edition
...planet has had small currency, although the discovery by Melvin Calvin of molecules resembling genetic material in meteors has given it some force. Bibliography See M. Calvin, Chemical Evolution (1969); E. Borek, The Sculpture...
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