修改美国梦:大衰退时期防止止赎的人种志

Anna Jefferson, Charlotte Perez
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引用次数: 0

摘要

美国2007-2009年的住房危机和经济大衰退引发了人们对美国身份的核心方面——即中产阶级意味着什么——的个人、政治和文化反思。从历史上看,拥有住房是实现“美国梦”和进入理想中产阶级的关键标志。因此,作为一种文化现象,丧失抵押品赎回权既是个人向下流动的象征,也是对美国梦这一民族神话的威胁。根据2009年至2011年在密歇根州进行的人种学田野调查,本文认为,住房危机造成了“面临止赎”的有限阶级地位。从这个有利的角度来看,面临丧失抵押品赎回权的房主和帮助他们的住房顾问批判性地重新审视了中产阶级的意义。田野调查显示,他们依靠物质、道德和政治要求来获得抵押贷款修改,以重申他们作为中产阶级主体的地位。当这些努力失败时,他们转向了系统性的批评,而不是美国梦所预测的个人指责。
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Modifying the American Dream: An Ethnography of Foreclosure Prevention in the Great Recession
The United States’ housing crisis and Great Recession of 2007-2009 ignited personal, political, and cultural reckoning with central facets of American identity, namely what it means to be middle class. Homeownership is historically a key symbol of having achieved the “American Dream” and entering an idealized middle class. As a cultural phenomenon, foreclosure is therefore a loaded symbol both of individual downward mobility and threats to a national myth of the American Dream. Drawing on ethnographic fieldwork conducted in Michigan in 2009-2011, this paper argues that the housing crisis created a liminal class status of “facing foreclosure”. From that vantage point, homeowners facing foreclosure and housing counselors assisting them critically re-examined the meanings of middle classness. The fieldwork reveals that they relied on material, moral, and political demands to obtain mortgage modifications to reassert their status as middle-class subjects. When these efforts failed, they turned to systemic critiques rather than the individualized blame the American Dream would predict.
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