In America’s response to the COVID-19 pandemic, we have
witnessed unprecedented attention being paid to a group usually marginalized,
forgotten, and left-behind by the media: the working-class
citizens among us. In a world where this class of American often never makes it
into the history books, the national response and uplifting of the working
class may finally push some to realize how integral these people are to our
society. When working-class people lose their jobs, the very structure of American life
crumbles. We can only hope that this is a lesson history will remember.
In perhaps the most visceral example for much of America,
parents across the nation who have been forced to begin homeschooling their
children have taken to social media to share their newfound appreciation for teachers.
Grey’s Anatomy creator Shonda Rhimes wrote on Twitter, “Been homeschooling a
6-year old and 8-year old for one hour and 11 minutes. Teachers deserve to make a billion dollars a
year. Or a week.” Over 600,000 likes and
tens of thousands of replies later, it was clear that parents across the nation
shared her sentiment. “Nothing like homeschooling during a pandemic to make
parents realize how truly invaluable teachers are,” replied one user; “The
coronavirus has showed … teachers and supply chain workers need to be paid more,”
wrote another.
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Source: Daily Mail |
When was the last time you saw somebody tweet about their gratitude
for the cleaning staff? “Thank you for all that you are doing to keep people
safe!” wrote
Twitter user Christina Noor in response to a custodian. It is a very underappreciated job, but I
think this time has made people a little more open to those still putting in
effort day in and day out.” Thousands of other users began to tweet in their
support of workers under the hashtag #SaveWorkers and began to raise money for
the working people who face dire times throughout the pandemic.
To me, this makes me consider most our conversations about
Ralph Ellison’s Invisible Man. In the same way that Ellison felt at
times like a faceless, meaningless ghost floating around the white-dominated
society of his time, the working class of America – the grocery store
employees, the bank tellers, the custodians, the factory employees – who do the
laborious work that keeps society moving for the privileged and unprivileged
alike, have felt a similar invisibility.
It is precisely because of this coronavirus that people are
beginning to realize how critical these employees are to the fabric of our
nation. People are reckoning with the fact that if the delivery man gets sick,
if the Amazon warehouse workers get sick, if the construction workers and
security employees and custodial staff get sick, parts of our lives will grind
to a halt. People are understanding how difficult of a job it must be to clean
or teach all day, every day, for little money. Most people might say that they
are relatively self-sufficient people, but this shared experience of a pandemic
that does not discriminate by class, race, or salary, has made Americans of all
types understand just how reliant we are on our working class.
Just as Ellison was ignored in a society largely built on
the backbreaking labor of blacks in America, the modern-day working class is
historically ignored in the society which they form the backbone of. If America
learns its lesson during this pandemic, we might be more conscious of our
working class in the future, instead of taking them for granted as history has
done time and time again. Perhaps by doing this we can find, and maintain, our
shared humanity, as opposed to continuing to hammer home the class divide over
and over again.
America is a country that often seems to have trouble learning from its past. We can only hope that now, from this time of global chaos, uncertainty, and distress, we can come out a stronger and more united nation that continues its newfound appreciation of the working class.
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