¶ … deviance relates to the American Dream
In his book, Always Running: La Vida Loca: Gang Days in L.A., Luis J. Rodriguez uses his own experience and writing talents to tell the story of lives that are caught in the fire of bad luck. Children who happened to be born in some of the poorest neighborhoods of LA in the 1960's, 70s or 80s, as Rodriguez, were condemned to contamination from the gang life that was going in the streets, around their homes, even creeping into their porches. The U.S. was marching on its way to become a world leader while huge urban areas like those of LA or Chicago were infested and ruled by a way of life that had little or nothing to do with the "American dream." Prostitution, drugs, alcohol and extreme violence, were the four main driving forces of "progress" in the "barrios." Life had little to no value as long as it did not fir into this landscape. This gangrene spread on the face of cities like LA or Chicago, covering huge areas an increasing in numbers to such an extent that police forces became completely powerless.
Rodriguez looks back on thirty years of his own disorderly, gang related life as well as forward, at his children and grandchildren and describes how little one could do to actually escape the fate of being born in a gangs controlled neighborhood. This richness of perspectives and deep involvement into what for most researchers remains a parallel world, gave his accounts the power of persuasion. One feels connected to the desperate father who is doing everything, even putting his own life in danger, to get his fugitive son back home in order to get a chance to sort things out together.
Rodriguez open his introduction to the new 2005 edition of his book with the following statement: "WHAT HAPPENED IN THE more than ten years since Always Running first hit the book stands? My son, Ramiro, for whom I wrote this book, is serving a 28-year prison sentence for three counts of attempted murder." He goes on describing how in the same timeframe, lives of people he once knew from the neighborhoods he lived in, or those of their children or other relatives, ended miserably in prison, or just ended, either in gang related dealings or because of drug and alcohol abuse. He describes a world of insanity that appears to have infested those homes as if rats had spread the plague. Precisely as if living in a plague infested town or village, people born in the unfortunate neighborhoods gangs reigned over, were living in quarantine for most of their life. Rodrigues keeps going though, as hard it is to image going though such hardships, regaining and keeping one's sanity. He publishes a new edition of this book in 2005 and he informs his readers about his hope for the better. One of the worst things happening to the low-income population in the U.S., "violence" is currently fought against with much more success than back in those black decades in the 60s, 70s and 80s, and it keeps reducing in size and intensity, he points out.
A life under the influence of a gang has a great deal to do with deviant behavior. The mental health of a young generation is at stakes when the environment if infested with deviant behavior. As many have thought or said when it comes to violence, no one is born with the wish to become a drug dealer or a prostitute or a terrorist. Besides his own personal example, Rodriguez describes his painful experience of having abandoned his two children from his first marriage, at the age when they most needed guidance and protection. They became easy prey to alcoholic and abusive stepfathers and what followed is imbalance. At one point in their youth, they became cases for psychiatric institutions.
Rodriguez is always going back and forth between his personal experiences or to those of people he came in contact with and the state the whole nation was in at different times, in order to connect the personal with the society as a whole. The reader is starting to get a better understanding of how one's personal life projects on the rest of the society and how society can influence one's personal life. As Dalton Conley is pointing out when speaking about his text book, "You May Ask Yourself," he focused on issues of health and "its role in reproducing social class." Speaking about the interviews he introduced in his "not like the typical textbook," he insists on his aim "to humanize this process"...
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