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An analytical lens that deconstructs social categories—such as race, class, gender, and sexuality—by revealing them to be socially constructed spectrums rather than natural binaries. It examines how societies create and enforce sharp boundaries (like the one-drop rule) to manage what is inherently a continuum of human variation and identity. A Spectrumist analysis of poverty wouldn't just look at the "poor" and "rich," but at the entire gradient of economic insecurity, from the precariously housed to the ultra-wealthy.
Spectrumism (Social Sciences) Example:
"The census form only had 'Male' and 'Female' boxes. That's the opposite of Spectrumism. A Spectrumist approach would be a slider from 0 to 100, or even better, a color wheel of identity."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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A methodological approach to studying society that prioritizes the analysis of absences, margins, and silenced voices. It posits that a society is defined as much by what it forgets, excludes, or renders invisible as by its dominant narratives and institutions. A spectral sociologist studies the "hauntings" of history—like the lingering trauma of colonialism in modern economic structures, or the unspoken grief that shapes a community's identity. It’s about reading the footnotes of history as closely as the main text, because that's where the ghosts live.
Spectralism (Social Sciences) Example:
"That gentrification study was classic Spectralism. It didn't just map the new coffee shops; it mapped the displaced communities, the closed businesses, and the erased cultural memory. The new neighborhood is literally haunted by the ghost of the old one."
by Abzugal February 21, 2026
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