Being from a Bad Neighbourhood: Confronting Bad Decision Discourses in the Impoverished Inner City

Authors

  • Laura Bisaillon Interdisciplinary Centre for Health and Society, University of Toronto Scarborough
  • Mehdia Hassan Social Justice, Lakehead University
  • Maryam Hassan Faculty of Law, Lakehead University

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17742/IMAGE.OI.10.2.10

Keywords:

Analyse visuelle, ethnographie des senses, imagination sociologique, organisation sociale des connaissances, pauvreté, photographies de rue, quartiers défavorisés, réduction des méfaits, Toronto

Abstract

This article confronts mainstream discourses about poverty and inner city poor neighbourhoods. It argues that the ways that poverty and poor inner city neighbourhoods are made publicly known in writing and through visual representations present problems such as overpowering structural causes of health and illness, reifying false dichotomy of us and them, and normalizing people living in poverty or working poor people as de facto vulnerable. This can happen when the social relations that govern poverty and sustain human suffering eschew the social relations that produce these experiences. Taking these relations as the objects of analysis, this article focuses sociologically on the Dundas/Sherbourne neighbourhood in Toronto, Canada, as the terrain of inquiry. The aim here is to contribute to analyses of the political, social, and economic determinants of health as well as to critiques of bad-neighbourhood and bad decision discourses. To do this, it bridges visual practice with critical social analysis: drawing together the authors’ individual practices as visual artists, marshaling their social positions as residents of the adjacent St. James Town neighbourhood, and sharing their experiences of the Dundas/Sherbourne area. They employ insights from sensory ethnography and street photography to offer an alternative source of knowledge about the poor inner city that contrasts and contests mainstream ways of knowing these same spaces.

Author Biographies

Laura Bisaillon, Interdisciplinary Centre for Health and Society, University of Toronto Scarborough

Laura Bisaillon, Ph.D., is assistant professor at the Interdisciplinary Centre for Health and Society, University of Toronto Scarborough. She is a sociologist of health and illness specializing in interpretive methods and the social studies of HIV-related policy and medical inadmissibility law in the Canadian immigration system.

Mehdia Hassan, Social Justice, Lakehead University

Mehdia Hassan, M.A., graduated from the Social Justice Studies Program at Lakehead University. Her final project entitled Showing Artful Inquiry was an arts-integrated community intervention working with youth in St. James Town. She explored how painting activities can be used to stimulate mental wellbeing and feelings of connectedness to the people and places we call home.

Maryam Hassan, Faculty of Law, Lakehead University

Maryam Hassan, B.A., is a law student at the Faculty of Law, Lakehead University. In 2017, her mixed media installation entitled Roshan, which presented a commentary on social justice issues in Afghanistan, was awarded first prize at the Art Museum’s Student Art Exhibition, University of Toronto.

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Published

2020-03-30

How to Cite

Bisaillon, L., Hassan, M., & Hassan, M. (2020). Being from a Bad Neighbourhood: Confronting Bad Decision Discourses in the Impoverished Inner City. Imaginations: Journal of Cross-Cultural Image Studies, 10(2), 221–274. https://doi.org/10.17742/IMAGE.OI.10.2.10

Issue

Section

Articles