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Janet Ruane Co-Authors Op-Ed for Chicago Times

Karen A. Cerulo and Janet M. Ruane: The crises keep coming. But Americans haven’t lost their ability to dream.

Posted in: Homepage News and Events, Sociology

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Janet Ruane, Professor in the , co-wrote an opinion piece for The Chicago Tribune about how, despite the challenges we face, Americans remain optimistic and still dare to dream. An excerpt of the Op-Ed is below. Read the full piece at .

The crises keep coming. But Americans haven’t lost their ability to dream.

Another school year is coming to a close, leaving students pondering their futures. Experts have argued that COVID-19 and the isolation it brought have influenced people’s development and future outlook — especially among the young. This topic is heating up again as new variants and 1 million-plus deaths in the U.S. raise the possibility of a return to Zoom classrooms, masking, social distancing and growing economic challenges.

To make matters worse, we must also contend with a new, frightening backdrop — the war on Ukraine. Daily accounts of the war present us with devastating sights and sounds: collapsed cities, explosions, mass graves, distraught victims. Life as people knew it is disappearing. In a March 16 New Yorker story, one young woman said, “Now there’s nothing in the future.â€

Is this young woman right? Is the future empty? For the past several years, we have researched what it means to dream — to imagine future possibilities. Tapping more than 270 people, we asked: Does everyone dream no matter what their reality is? What do those dreams look like? Are they uniquely personal, or are they patterned, following a cultural script? Do dreams differ from age to age, group to group, context to context? Do people ever fail to dream or simply stop dreaming?