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ویرایش:
نویسندگان: Jonathan Kozol
سری:
ناشر: Broadway
سال نشر: 2012
تعداد صفحات: 0
زبان: English
فرمت فایل : EPUB (درصورت درخواست کاربر به PDF، EPUB یا AZW3 تبدیل می شود)
حجم فایل: 2 مگابایت
در صورت تبدیل فایل کتاب Savage Inequalities: Children in America's Schools به فرمت های PDF، EPUB، AZW3، MOBI و یا DJVU می توانید به پشتیبان اطلاع دهید تا فایل مورد نظر را تبدیل نمایند.
توجه داشته باشید کتاب نابرابری وحشیانه: کودکان در مدارس آمریکا نسخه زبان اصلی می باشد و کتاب ترجمه شده به فارسی نمی باشد. وبسایت اینترنشنال لایبرری ارائه دهنده کتاب های زبان اصلی می باشد و هیچ گونه کتاب ترجمه شده یا نوشته شده به فارسی را ارائه نمی دهد.
For two years, beginning in 1988, Jonathan Kozol visited
schools in neighborhoods across the country, from Illinois to
Washington D.C., and from New York to San Antonio. He spoke
with teachers, principals, superintendents, and, most
important, children. What he found was devastating. Not only
were schools for rich and poor blatantly unequal, the gulf
between the two extremes was widening—and it has widened
since. The urban schools he visited were overcrowded
and understaffed, and lacked the basic elements of
learning—including books and, all too often, classrooms for
the students.
In Savage
Inequalities, Kozol delivers a searing
examination of the extremes of wealth and poverty and calls
into question the reality of equal opportunity in our
nation’s schools.
“An impassioned book, laced with anger and indignation, about
how our public education system scorns so many of our
children.” –New York Times Book Review
“I was unprepared for the horror and shame I felt…
Savage Inequalities is a savage
indictment…Everyone should read this important book.” –Robert
Wilson, USA Today
“Kozol has written a book that must be read by anyone
interested in education.” –Elizabeth Duff, Philadelphia
Inquirer
“The forces of equity have now been joined by a powerful
voice…Kozol has written a searing exposé of the extremes of
wealth and poverty in America’s school system and the
blighting effect on poor children, especially those in
cities.” –Emily Mitchell, Time
“Easily the most passionate, and certain to be the most
passionately debated, book about American education in
several years…A classic American muckraker with an eloquent
prose style, Kozol offers…an old-fashioned brand of moral
outrage that will affect every reader whose heart has not yet
turned to stone.” –Entertainment Weekly
“Moving…Shocking…Heartbreaking.” –Ruth Sidel, The
Nation
“It is neither ironic nor paradoxical to call
Savage Inequalities a wonderful
book—for Kozol makes it clear that there are wonderful
teachers and wonderful students in every American school, no
matter what ugliness, violence, and horror surround the
building.”—Chicago Tribune
“The great virtue of Jonathan Kozol’s new book about
inner-city school sis that it overcomes that ‘everybody
knows’ problem by bringing an undulled capacity for shock and
outrage to a tour of bad schools across the country. As soon
as Kozol begins leading the way through a procession of
overcrowded, underheated, textbookless, barely taught
classrooms, the thought he surely intended to engender begins
to take form: How can this be?” –Washington Post Book
World
“Poor children of all colors are increasingly looked upon as
surplus baggage, mistakes that should never have happened.
Indeed, an older view is returning that any attempts to
educate the lower orders are doomed to fail. There can be
more than one way to read the title of Jonathan Kozol’s
depressing—and essential—book.” – Andrew Hacker, New York
Times Book Review
“Mr. Kozol exposes lemons in American educational facilities
I the same way Ralph Nader attacked Detroit automobile
makers.” –Herbert Mitgang, New York Times
“This book digs so deeply into the tragedy o the American
system of public education that it wrenches the reader’s
psyche…A must-read for every parent, every educator, and
every relevant policymaker.” --Alex Haley, author of
Roots and The Autobiography of Malcolm
X
“A powerful appeal to save children by redistributing the
wealth. It will cause angry, but perhaps fruitful, debate.”
–Kirkus Reviews
“Startling and compelling…Crucial to any serious debate on
the current state of American education.”
–Publishers Weekly
“A superb, heart-wrenching portrait of the resolute injustice
which decimates so many of America’s urban schools.” –David
J. Garrow, Pulitzer Prize-winning author of Bearing the
Cross
Chapter One
Life on the Mississippi: East St. Louis,
Illinois
East St. Louis lies in the heart of the American Bottoms—the
floodplain on the east side of the Mississippi River opposite
St. Louis. To the east of the city lie the Illinois Bluffs,
which surround the floodplain in a semicircle. Towns on the
Bluffs re predominantly white and do not welcome visitors
from East St. Louis.
“The two tiers—Bluffs and Bottoms—“ writes
James Nowlan, a professor of public policy at Knox College,
“have long represented…different worlds.” Their physical
separation, he believes, “helps rationalize the psychological
and cultural distance that those on the Bluffs have clearly
tired to maintain,” People on the Bluffs, says Nowlan,
“overwhelmingly want this separation to continue.”
Towns on the Bluffs, according to
Nowlan, do not pay taxes to address flood problems in the
Bottoms, “even though these problems are generated in large
part by the water that drains from the Bluffs.” East St.
Louis lacks the funds to cope with flooding problems on its
own, or to reconstruct its sewer system, which, according to
local experts, is “irreparable.” The problem is all the worse
because the chemical plants in East St. Louis and adjacent
towns have for decades been releasing toxins into the sewer
system.
The pattern of concentrating black
communities in easily flooded lowland areas is not unusual in
the United States. Farther down the river, for example, in
the Delta town of Tunica, Mississippi, people in the black
community of Sugar ditch live in shacks by open sewers that
are commonly believed to be responsible for the high
incidence of liver tumors and abscesses found in children
there. Metaphors of caste like these are everywhere in the
United States. Sadly, although dirt and water flow downhill,
money and services do not.
The dangers of exposure to raw sewage,
which backs up repeatedly into the homes of residents in East
St. Louis, were first noticed, in the spring of 1989, at a
public housing project, Villa Griffin. Raw sewage, says the
Post-Dispatch, overflowed into a playground just
behind the housing project, which is home to 187 children,
“forming an oozing lake of…tainted water.” Two schoolgirls,
we are told, “experienced hair loss since raw sewage flowed
into their homes.”
While local physicians are not certain
whether loss of hair is caused by the raw sewage, they have
issued warnings that exposure to raw sewage can provoke a
cholera or hepatitis outbreak. A St. Louis health official
voices her dismay that children live with waste in their
backyards. “The development of working sewage systems made
cities livable a hundred years ago,” she notes. “Sewage
systems separate us from the Third World.”
“It’s a terrible way to live,” says a
mother at the Villa Griffin homes, as she bails raw sewage
from her sink. Health officials warn again of cholera—and,
this time, of typhoid also.
The sewage, which is flowing from
collapsed pipes and dysfunctional pumping stations, has also
flooded basements all over the city. The city’s vacuum truck,
which uses water and suction to unclog the city’s sewers,
cannot be sued because it needs $5,000 in repairs. Even when
it works, it sometimes can’t be used because there isn’t
money to hire drivers. A single engineer now does the work
that 14 others did before they were laid off. By April the
pool of overflow behind the Villa Griffin project has
expanded into a lagoon of sewage. Two million gallons of raw
sewage lie outside the children’s homes.
In May, another health emergency develops.
Soil samples tested at residential sites in East St. Louis
turn up disturbing quantities of arsenic, mercury and lead—as
well as steroids dumped in previous years by stockyards in
the area. Lead levels found in the soil around one family’s
home, according to lead-poison experts, measure “an
astronomical 10,000 parts per million.” Five of the children
in the building have been poisoned. Although children rarely
die of poisoning by lead, health experts note, its effects
tend to be subtle and insidious. By the time the poisoning
becomes apparent in a child’s sleep disorders, stomach pains,
and hyperactive behavior, says a health official, “it is too
late to undo the permanent brain damage.” The poison, she
says, “is chipping away at the learning potential of kids
whose potential has already been chipped away by their
environment.”
The budget of the city’s department of
lead-poison control, however, has been slashed, and one
person now does the work once done by six.
Lead poisoning in most cities comes from
lead-based paint in housing, which has been illegal in most
states for decades but which poisons children still because
most cities, Boston and New York among them, rarely penalize
offending landlords. In East St. Louis, however, there is a
second source of lead. Health inspectors think it is another
residue of manufacturing—including smelting—in the factories
and mills whose plants surround the city. “Some of the
factories are gone,” a parent organizer says, “but they have
left their poison in the soil where our children play.” In
one apartment complex where particularly high quantities of
lead have been detected I the soil, 32 children with high
levels in their blood have been identified.
“I anticipate finding the whole city
contaminated,” says a health examiner.
The Daughters of Charity, whose works of
mercy are well known in the Third World, operate a mission at
the Villa Griffin homes. On an afternoon in early spring of
1990, Sister Julia Huiskamp meets me on King Boulevard and
drives me to the Griffin homes.
As we ride past blocks and blocks of
skeletal structures, some of which are still inhabited, she
slows the car repeatedly at railroad crossing. A seemingly
endless railroad train tolls past us to the right. On the
left: a blackened lot where garbage has been burning. Next to
the burning garbage is a row of 12 white cabins, charred by
fire. Next: a lot that holds a heap of auto tires and a
mountain of tin cans. More burnt houses. More trash fires.
The train moves almost imperceptibly across the flatness of
the land.
Fifty years old, and wearing a blue suit,
white blouse, and blue head-cover, Sister Juliapoints to the
nicest house in sight. The sign on the front reads MOTEL.
“It’s a whorehouse,” Sister Julia says.
When she slows the car beside a group of
teen-age boys, one of them steps out toward the car, then
backs away as she is recognized.
The 99 units of the Villa Griffin
homes—two-story structures, brick on the first floor, yellow
woods above—form one border of a recessed park and playground
that were filled with fecal matter last year when the sewage
mains exploded. The sewage is gone now and the grass is very
green and looks inviting. When nine-year-old Serena and her
seven-year-old brother take me for a walk, however, I
discover that our shoes sink into what is still a sewage
marsh. An inch-deep residue of fouled water still
remains.
Serena’s brother is a handsome, joyous
little boy, but troublingly thin. Three other children join
us as we walk along the marsh: Smokey, who is nine years old,
but cannot tell time; Mickey, who is seven; and a tiny child
with a ponytail and big brown eyes who talks a constant
stream of words that I can’t always understand.
“Hush, Little Sister,” says Serena. I ask
for her name, but “Little Sister” is the only name the
children seem to know.
“There go my cousins,” Smokey says,
pointing to two teen-age girls above us on the
hill.
The day is warm, although we’re only in the
second week of March; several dogs and cats are playing by
the edges of the marsh. “It’s a lot of squirrels here,” says
Smokey. “There go one!”
“This here squirrel is a friend of
mine,” says Little Sister.
None of the children can tell me the
approximate time that school begins. One says five o’clock.
One says six. Another says that school begins at
noon.
When I ask what song they sing after the
flag pledge, one says “Jingle Bells.”
Smokey cannot decide if he is in the second
or third grade.
Seven-year-old Mickey sucks his thumb
during the walk.
The children regale me with a chilling
story as we stand beside the marsh. Smokey says his sister
was raped and murdered and then dumped behind his school.
Other children add more details: Smokey’s sister was 11 years
old. She was beaten with a brick until she died. The murder
was committed by a man who knew her mother.
The narrative begins when, without warning,
Smokey says, “My sister has got killed.”
“She was my best friend,” Serena
says.
“They had beat her in the head and raped
her,” Smokey says.
“She was hollering out loud,” says Little
Sister.
I ask them when it happened. Smokey says,
“Last year.” Serena then corrects him and she says, “Last
week.”
“It scared me because...