A full night of drinking in a dirty city, filling your lungs
with smoke and smog, disoriented, swimming in soiled sheets with someone who’ll
give you the reason for your next prescription, then waking up and being flown away to a utopian valley set a top
a mountain summit with nothing more on your mind than the warm breeze coming across
the lake as you walk along the soft shore. Harriet Martineau’s reading was revitalizing. Maybe
not quite as extensive as that but I definitely enjoyed that very much.
The
fact that such wonderfully fresh ideas were ignored soon after she died, even
with the great impression she made was a sure sign of the time, what a bummer. She
had it all figured out, happiness, that’s all. If everybody’s happy what could
possibly be the matter? Eliminate all created inequalities and be kind.
Rationally, it’s a far out idea but it’s the blueprint to societal perfection.
Her four anomalies of slavery, unequal status of women, pursuit of wealth, and
fear of public opinion are wonderful. Everybody should be able to at least have
an understanding for how these are “misalignments of societal morals and
manners”. For me, as I’m sure for you, one sticks out more than the other. The
most prominent for me is fear of public opinion. Growing up I was always
concerned about others perceptions, it dictated my mannerisms, values,
opinions, everything. It sucked, and in short I got sick of it and snapped. It
wasn’t overnight but roughly the course of a year or two I had spun all the way
around, and let me tell you what a breath of fresh air that was. I think if
everyone could honestly be unapologetically themselves it would make the world
a marvelous place (unless you’re a murderer or a rapist or some kind of screw
up).
Another
thing I loved was how she said “the sociologist must try to develop a
sympathetic understanding as a strategy for discovering the meanings of an
activity for the actors.” Aristotle had said; “It’s the mark of an educated mind
to be able to entertain a thought without accepting it.” That’s the first thing
I thought of after I finished reading her sentence. I love talking to people
that understand (or at least try to) what you’re saying before they blurt
something back. I feel like I recognized, after reading Martineau’s paper, that
a few of the previous sociologists had more or less of a “my way or the highway”
type of attitude. Anyway, I like what she had to say a lot, my favorite so far.
How could like her writings? Like what was stated before, if everyone is happy that what could be wrong? Only if society was able to throw this ideas into a practical application we have the possibility of life in the United States get better.
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