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Social class

A social class is a grouping of people into a set of hierarchical social categories,[1] the most common being the upper, middle and lower classes. Membership in a social class can for example be dependent on education, wealth, occupation, income, and belonging to a particular subculture or social network.[2]

From top-left to bottom-right or from top to bottom (mobile): a samurai and his servant, c. 1846; a butler places a telephone call, 1922; The Bower Garden, painting by Dante Gabriel Rossetti, 1859

"Class" is a subject of analysis for sociologists, political scientists, anthropologists and social historians. The term has a wide range of sometimes conflicting meanings, and there is no broad consensus on a definition of "class". Some people argue that due to social mobility, class boundaries do not exist. In common parlance, the term "social class" is usually synonymous with "socio-economic class", defined as "people having the same social, economic, cultural, political or educational status", e.g., "the working class"; "an emerging professional class".[3] However, academics distinguish social class from socioeconomic status, using the former to refer to one's relatively stable sociocultural background and the latter to refer to one's current social and economic situation which is consequently more changeable over time.[4]

The precise measurements of what determines social class in society have varied over time. Karl Marx thought "class" was defined by one's relationship to the means of production (their relations of production). His understanding of classes in modern capitalist society is that the proletariat work but do not own the means of production, and the bourgeoisie, those who invest and live off the surplus generated by the proletariat's operation of the means of production, do not work at all. This contrasts with the view of the sociologist Max Weber, who argued that "class" is determined by economic position, in contrast to "social status" or "Stand" which is determined by social prestige rather than simply just relations of production.[5] The term "class" is etymologically derived from the Latin classis, which was used by census takers to categorize citizens by wealth in order to determine military service obligations.[6]

In the late 18th century, the term "class" began to replace classifications such as estates, rank and orders as the primary means of organizing society into hierarchical divisions.[fact or opinion?] This corresponded to a general decrease in significance ascribed to hereditary characteristics and increase in the significance of wealth and income as indicators of position in the social hierarchy.[7][8]

History

Ancient Egypt

The existence of a class system dates back to times of Ancient Egypt, where the position of elite was also characterized by literacy.[9] The wealthier people were at the top in the social order and common people and slaves being at the bottom.[10] However, the class was not rigid; a man of humble origins could ascend to a high post.[11]: 38- 

The ancient Egyptians viewed men and women, including people from all social classes, as essentially equal under the law, and even the lowliest peasant was entitled to petition the vizier and his court for redress.[12]

Farmers made up the bulk of the population, but agricultural produce was owned directly by the state, temple, or noble family that owned the land.[13]: 383  Farmers were also subject to a labor tax and were required to work on irrigation or construction projects in a corvée system.[14]: 136  Artists and craftsmen were of higher status than farmers, but they were also under state control, working in the shops attached to the temples and paid directly from the state treasury. Scribes and officials formed the upper class in ancient Egypt, known as the "white kilt class" in reference to the bleached linen garments that served as a mark of their rank.[15]: 109  The upper class prominently displayed their social status in art and literature. Below the nobility were the priests, physicians, and engineers with specialized training in their field. It is unclear whether slavery as understood today existed in ancient Egypt; there is difference of opinions among authors.[16]

 
Slave beating in ancient Egypt

Not a single Egyptian was, in our sense of the word, free. No individual could call in question a hierarchy of authority which culminated in a living god.

Although slaves were mostly used as indentured servants, they were able to buy and sell their servitude, work their way to freedom or nobility, and were usually treated by doctors in the workplace.[17]

Elsewhere

In Ancient Greece when the clan system [a] was declining. The classes[b] replaced the clan society when it became too small to sustain the needs of increasing population. The division of labor is also essential for the growth of classes.[11]: 39 

 
Burmese nobles and servants
 
Nigerian warriors armed with spears in the retinue of a mounted war chief. The Earth and Its Inhabitants, 1892

Historically, social class and behavior were laid down in law. For example, permitted mode of dress in some times and places was strictly regulated, with sumptuous dressing only for the high ranks of society and aristocracy, whereas sumptuary laws stipulated the dress and jewelry appropriate for a person's social rank and station. In Europe, these laws became increasingly commonplace during the Middle Ages. However, these laws were prone to change due to societal changes, and in many cases, these distinctions may either almost disappear, such as the distinction between a patrician and a plebeian being almost erased during the late Roman Republic.

Jean-Jacques Rousseau had a large influence over political ideals of the French Revolution because of his views of inequality and classes. Rousseau saw humans as "naturally pure and good," meaning that humans from birth were seen as innocent and any evilness was learned. He believed that social problems arise through the development of society and suppress the innate pureness of humankind. He also believed that private property is the main reason for social issues in society because private property creates inequality through the property's value. Even though his theory predicted if there were no private property then there would be wide spread equality, Rousseau accepted that there will always be social inequality because of how society is viewed and run.[18]

Later Enlightenment thinkers viewed inequality as valuable and crucial to society's development and prosperity. They also acknowledged that private property will ultimately cause inequality because specific resources that are privately owned can be stored and the owners profit off of the deficit of the resource. This can create competition between the classes that was seen as necessary by these thinkers.[18] This also creates stratification between the classes keeping a distinct difference between lower, poorer classes and the higher, wealthier classes.

India (), Nepal, North Korea (), Sri Lanka () and some Indigenous peoples maintain social classes today.

In class societies, class conflict has tended to recur or is ongoing, depending on the sociological and anthropolitical perspective.[19][20] Class societies have not always existed; there have been widely different types of class communities.[21][22][23] For example, societies based on age rather than capital.[24] During colonialism, social relations were dismantled by force, which gave rise to societies based on the social categories of waged labor, private property, and capital.[24][25]

Class society

Class society or class-based society is an organizing principle society in which ownership of property, means of production, and wealth is the determining factor of the distribution of power, in which those with more property and wealth are stratified higher in the society and those without access to the means of production and without wealth are stratified lower in the society. In a class society, at least implicitly, people are divided into distinct social strata, commonly referred to as social classes or castes. The nature of class society is a matter of sociological research.[26][27][28] Class societies exist all over the globe in both industrialized and developing nations.[29] Class stratification is theorized to come directly from capitalism.[30] In terms of public opinion, nine out of ten people in a Swedish survey considered it correct that they are living in a class society.[31]

Comparative sociological research

One may use comparative methods to study class societies, using, for example, comparison of Gini coefficients, de facto educational opportunities, unemployment, and culture.[32][33]

Effect on the population

Societies with large class differences have a greater proportion of people who suffer from mental health issues such as anxiety and depression symptoms.[34][35][36] A series of scientific studies have demonstrated this relationship.[37] Statistics support this assertion and results are found in life expectancy and overall health; for example, in the case of high differences in life expectancy between two Stockholm suburbs. The differences between life expectancy of the poor and less-well-educated inhabitants who live in proximity to the station Vårby gård, and the highly educated and more affluent inhabitants living near Danderyd differ by 18 years.[38][39]

Similar data about New York is also available for life expectancy, average income per capita, income distribution, median income mobility for people who grew up poor, share with a bachelor's degree or higher.[40]

In class societies, the lower classes systematically receive lower-quality education and care.[41][42][43] There are more explicit effects where those within the higher class actively demonize parts of the lower-class population.[33]

Theoretical models

Definitions of social classes reflect a number of sociological perspectives, informed by anthropology, economics, psychology and sociology. The major perspectives historically have been Marxism and structural functionalism. The common stratum model of class divides society into a simple hierarchy of working class, middle class and upper class. Within academia, two broad schools of definitions emerge: those aligned with 20th-century sociological stratum models of class society and those aligned with the 19th-century historical materialist economic models of the Marxists and anarchists.[44][45][46]

Another distinction can be drawn between analytical concepts of social class, such as the Marxist and Weberian traditions, as well as the more empirical traditions such as socioeconomic status approach, which notes the correlation of income, education and wealth with social outcomes without necessarily implying a particular theory of social structure.[47]

Marxist

"[Classes are] large groups of people differing from each other by the place they occupy in a historically determined system of social production, by their relation (in most cases fixed and formulated in law) to the means of production, by their role in the social organization of labor, and, consequently, by the dimensions of the share of social wealth of which they dispose and the mode of acquiring it."

Vladimir Lenin, A Great Beginning on June 1919

For Marx, class is a combination of objective and subjective factors. Objectively, a class shares a common relationship to the means of production. The class society itself is understood as the aggregated phenomenon to the "interlinked movement", which generates the quasi-objective concept of capital.[48] Subjectively, the members will necessarily have some perception ("class consciousness") of their similarity and common interest. Class consciousness is not simply an awareness of one's own class interest but is also a set of shared views regarding how society should be organized legally, culturally, socially and politically. These class relations are reproduced through time.

In Marxist theory, the class structure of the capitalist mode of production is characterized by the conflict between two main classes: the bourgeoisie, the capitalists who own the means of production and the much larger proletariat (or "working class") who must sell their own labour power (wage labour). This is the fundamental economic structure of work and property, a state of inequality that is normalized and reproduced through cultural ideology.

For Marxists, every person in the process of production has separate social relationships and issues. Along with this, every person is placed into different groups that have similar interests and values that can differ drastically from group to group. Class is special in that does not relate to specifically to a singular person, but to a specific role.[18]

Marxists explain the history of "civilized" societies in terms of a war of classes between those who control production and those who produce the goods or services in society. In the Marxist view of capitalism, this is a conflict between capitalists (bourgeoisie) and wage-workers (the proletariat). For Marxists, class antagonism is rooted in the situation that control over social production necessarily entails control over the class which produces goods—in capitalism this is the exploitation of workers by the bourgeoisie.[49]

Furthermore, "in countries where modern civilisation has become fully developed, a new class of petty bourgeois has been formed".[50] "An industrial army of workmen, under the command of a capitalist, requires, like a real army, officers (managers) and sergeants (foremen, over-lookers) who, while the work is being done, command in the name of the capitalist".[51]

Marx makes the argument that, as the bourgeoisie reach a point of wealth accumulation, they hold enough power as the dominant class to shape political institutions and society according to their own interests. Marx then goes on to claim that the non-elite class, owing to their large numbers, have the power to overthrow the elite and create an equal society.[52]

In The Communist Manifesto, Marx himself argued that it was the goal of the proletariat itself to displace the capitalist system with socialism, changing the social relationships underpinning the class system and then developing into a future communist society in which: "the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all". This would mark the beginning of a classless society in which human needs rather than profit would be motive for production. In a society with democratic control and production for use, there would be no class, no state and no need for financial and banking institutions and money.[53][54]

These theorists have taken this binary class system and expanded it to include contradictory class locations, the idea that a person can be employed in many different class locations that fall between the two classes of proletariat and bourgeoisie. Erik Olin Wright stated that class definitions are more diverse and elaborate through identifying with multiple classes, having familial ties with people in different a class, or having a temporary leadership role.[18]

Weberian

Max Weber formulated a three-component theory of stratification that saw social class as emerging from an interplay between "class", "status" and "power". Weber believed that class position was determined by a person's relationship to the means of production, while status or "Stand" emerged from estimations of honor or prestige.[55]

Weber views class as a group of people who have common goals and opportunities that are available to them. This means that what separates each class from each other is their value in the marketplace through their own goods and services. This creates a divide between the classes through the assets that they have such as property and expertise.[18]

Weber derived many of his key concepts on social stratification by examining the social structure of many countries. He noted that contrary to Marx's theories, stratification was based on more than simply ownership of capital. Weber pointed out that some members of the aristocracy lack economic wealth yet might nevertheless have political power. Likewise in Europe, many wealthy Jewish families lacked prestige and honor because they were considered members of a "pariah group".

  • Class: A person's economic position in a society. Weber differs from Marx in that he does not see this as the supreme factor in stratification. Weber noted how managers of corporations or industries control firms they do not own.
  • Status: A person's prestige, social honour or popularity in a society. Weber noted that political power was not rooted in capital value solely, but also in one's status. Poets and saints, for example, can possess immense influence on society with often little economic worth.
  • Power: A person's ability to get their way despite the resistance of others. For example, individuals in state jobs, such as an employee of the Federal Bureau of Investigation, or a member of the United States Congress, may hold little property or status, but they still hold immense power.

Bourdieu

For Bourdieu, the place in the social strata for any person is vaguer than the equivalent in Weberian sociology. Bourdieu introduced an array of concepts of what he refers to as types of capital. These types were economic capital, in the form assets convertible to money and secured as private property. This type of capital is separated from the other types of culturally constituted types of capital, which Bourdieu introduces, which are: personal cultural capital (formal education, knowledge); objective cultural capital (books, art); and institutionalized cultural capital (honours and titles).

Great British Class Survey

On 2 April 2013, the results of a survey[56] conducted by BBC Lab UK developed in collaboration with academic experts and slated to be published in the journal Sociology were published online.[57][58][59][60][61] The results released were based on a survey of 160,000 residents of the United Kingdom most of whom lived in England and described themselves as "white". Class was defined and measured according to the amount and kind of economic, cultural and social resources reported. Economic capital was defined as income and assets; cultural capital as amount and type of cultural interests and activities; and social capital as the quantity and social status of their friends, family and personal and business contacts.[60] This theoretical framework was developed by Pierre Bourdieu who first published his theory of social distinction in 1979.

Three-level economic class model

Today, concepts of social class often assume three general economic categories: a very wealthy and powerful upper class that owns and controls the means of production; a middle class of professional workers, small business owners and low-level managers; and a lower class, who rely on low-paying jobs for their livelihood and experience poverty.

Upper class

 
A symbolic image of three orders of feudal society in Europe prior to the French Revolution, which shows the rural third estate carrying the clergy and the nobility

The upper class[62] is the social class composed of those who are rich, well-born, powerful, or a combination of those. They usually wield the greatest political power. In some countries, wealth alone is sufficient to allow entry into the upper class. In others, only people who are born or marry into certain aristocratic bloodlines are considered members of the upper class and those who gain great wealth through commercial activity are looked down upon by the aristocracy as nouveau riche.[63] In the United Kingdom, for example, the upper classes are the aristocracy and royalty, with wealth playing a less important role in class status. Many aristocratic peerages or titles have seats attached to them, with the holder of the title (e.g. Earl of Bristol) and his family being the custodians of the house, but not the owners. Many of these require high expenditures, so wealth is typically needed. Many aristocratic peerages and their homes are parts of estates, owned and run by the title holder with moneys generated by the land, rents or other sources of wealth. However, in the United States where there is no aristocracy or royalty, the upper class status exclusive of Americans of ancestral wealth or patricians of European ancestry is referred to in the media as the extremely wealthy, the so-called "super-rich", though there is some tendency even in the United States for those with old family wealth to look down on those who have accrued their money through business, the struggle between new money and old money.

The upper class is generally contained within the richest one or two percent of the population. Members of the upper class are often born into it and are distinguished by immense wealth which is passed from generation to generation in the form of estates.[64] Based on some new social and political theories upper class consists of the most wealthy decile group in society which holds nearly 87% of the whole society's wealth.[65]

Middle class

See also: Middle-class squeeze

The middle class is the most contested of the three categories, the broad group of people in contemporary society who fall socio-economically between the lower and upper classes.[66] One example of the contest of this term is that in the United States "middle class" is applied very broadly and includes people who would elsewhere be considered working class. Middle-class workers are sometimes called "white-collar workers".

Theorists such as Ralf Dahrendorf have noted the tendency toward an enlarged middle class in modern Western societies, particularly in relation to the necessity of an educated work force in technological economies.[67] Perspectives concerning globalization and neocolonialism, such as dependency theory, suggest this is due to the shift of low-level labour to developing nations and the Third World.[68]

Middle class is the group of people with typical-everyday jobs that pay significantly more than the poverty line. Examples of these types of jobs are factory workers, salesperson, teacher, cooks and nurses. There is a new trend by some scholars which assumes that the size of the middle class in every society is the same. For example, in paradox of interest theory, middle class are those who are in 6th–9th decile groups which hold nearly 12% of the whole society's wealth.[69]

Lower class

 
In many countries, the lowest stratum of the working class, the underclass, often lives in urban areas with low-quality civil services

Lower class (occasionally described as working class) are those employed in low-paying wage jobs with very little economic security. The term "lower class" also refers to persons with low income.

The working class is sometimes separated into those who are employed but lacking financial security (the "working poor") and an underclass—those who are long-term unemployed and/or homeless, especially those receiving welfare from the state. The latter is today considered analogous to the Marxist term "lumpenproletariat". However, during the time of Marx's writing the lumpenproletariat referred to those in dire poverty; such as the homeless.[62] Members of the working class are sometimes called blue-collar workers.

Consequences of class position

A person's socioeconomic class has wide-ranging effects. It can determine the schools they are able to attend,[70][71][72][73][74][75] their health,[76] the jobs open to them,[70] when they exit the labour market,[77] whom they may marry[78] and their treatment by police and the courts.[79]

Angus Deaton and Anne Case have analyzed the mortality rates related to the group of white, middle-aged Americans between the ages of 45 and 54 and its relation to class. There has been a growing number of suicides and deaths by substance abuse in this particular group of middle-class Americans. This group also has been recorded to have an increase in reports of chronic pain and poor general health. Deaton and Case came to the conclusion from these observations that because of the constant stress that these white, middle aged Americans feel fighting poverty and wavering between the middle and lower classes, these strains have taken a toll on these people and affected their whole bodies.[76]

Social classifications can also determine the sporting activities that such classes take part in. It is suggested that those of an upper social class are more likely to take part in sporting activities, whereas those of a lower social background are less likely to participate in sport. However, upper-class people tend to not take part in certain sports that have been commonly known to be linked with the lower class.[80]

Social privilege

Education

A person's social class has a significant effect on their educational opportunities. Not only are upper-class parents able to send their children to exclusive schools that are perceived to be better, but in many places, state-supported schools for children of the upper class are of a much higher quality than those the state provides for children of the lower classes.[81][82][83][84][85][86] This lack of good schools is one factor that perpetuates the class divide across generations.

In the UK, the educational consequences of class position have been discussed by scholars inspired by the cultural studies framework of the CCCS and/or, especially regarding working-class girls, feminist theory. On working-class boys, Paul Willis' 1977 book Learning to Labour: How Working Class Kids Get Working Class Jobs is seen within the British Cultural Studies field as a classic discussion of their antipathy to the acquisition of knowledge.[87] Beverley Skeggs described Learning to Labour as a study on the "irony" of "how the process of cultural and economic reproduction is made possible by 'the lads' ' celebration of the hard, macho world of work."[88]

Health and nutrition

A person's social class often affects their physical health, their ability to receive adequate medical care and nutrition and their life expectancy.[89][90][91]

Lower-class people experience a wide array of health problems as a result of their economic status. They are unable to use health care as often and when they do it is of lower quality, even though they generally tend to experience a much higher rate of health issues. Lower-class families have higher rates of infant mortality, cancer, cardiovascular disease and disabling physical injuries. Additionally, poor people tend to work in much more hazardous conditions, yet generally have much less (if any) health insurance provided for them, as compared to middle- and upper-class workers.[92]

Employment

The conditions at a person's job vary greatly depending on class. Those in the upper-middle class and middle class enjoy greater freedoms in their occupations. They are usually more respected, enjoy more diversity and are able to exhibit some authority.[93] Those in lower classes tend to feel more alienated and have lower work satisfaction overall. The physical conditions of the workplace differ greatly between classes. While middle-class workers may "suffer alienating conditions" or "lack of job satisfaction", blue-collar workers are more apt to suffer alienating, often routine, work with obvious physical health hazards, injury and even death.[94]

In the UK, a 2015 government study by the Social Mobility Commission suggested the existence of a "glass floor" in British society preventing those who are less able, but who come from wealthier backgrounds, from slipping down the social ladder. The report proposed a 35% greater likelihood of less able, better-off children becoming high earners than bright poor children.[95]

Class conflict

Class conflict, frequently referred to as "class warfare" or "class struggle", is the tension or antagonism which exists in society due to competing socioeconomic interests and desires between people of different classes.

For Marx, the history of class society was a history of class conflict. He pointed to the successful rise of the bourgeoisie and the necessity of revolutionary violence—a heightened form of class conflict—in securing the bourgeois rights that supported the capitalist economy.

Marx believed that the exploitation and poverty inherent in capitalism were a pre-existing form of class conflict. Marx believed that wage labourers would need to revolt to bring about a more equitable distribution of wealth and political power.[96][97]

Classless society

A "classless" society is one in which no one is born into a social class. Distinctions of wealth, income, education, culture or social network might arise and would only be determined by individual experience and achievement in such a society.

Since these distinctions are difficult to avoid, advocates of a classless society (such as anarchists and communists) propose various means to achieve and maintain it and attach varying degrees of importance to it as an end in their overall programs/philosophy.

Relationship between ethnicity and class

 
Equestrian portrait of Empress Elizabeth of Russia with a Moor servant

Race and other large-scale groupings can also influence class standing. The association of particular ethnic groups with class statuses is common in many societies, and is linked with race as well.[98] Class and ethnicity can impact a persons, or communities, Socioeconomic standing, which in turn influences everything including job availability and the quality of available health and education.[98] The labels ascribed to an individual change the way others perceive them, with multiple labels associated with stigma combining to worsen the social consequences of being labelled.[99]

As a result of conquest or internal ethnic differentiation, a ruling class is often ethnically homogenous and particular races or ethnic groups in some societies are legally or customarily restricted to occupying particular class positions. Which ethnicities are considered as belonging to high or low classes varies from society to society.

In modern societies, strict legal links between ethnicity and class have been drawn, such as the caste system in Africa, apartheid, the position of the Burakumin in Japanese society and the casta system in Latin America.[citation needed]

See also

Notes

  1. ^ based on blood relations
  2. ^ based on occupation

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Bibliography

  • Ojämlikhetens dimensioner – Marie Evertsson & Charlotta Magnusson (red.) (In Swedish) ISBN 9789147111299
  • Om konsten att lyfta sig själv i håret och behålla barnet i badvattnet : kritiska synpunkter på samhällsvetenskapens vetenskapsteori – Israel, Joachim (In Swedish) ISBN 91-29-43746-6
  • The inner level : how more equal societies reduce stress, restore sanity and improve everyone's well-being – Richard G Wilkinson; Kate Pickett ISBN 9780141975399
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Further reading

  • Archer, Louise et al. Higher Education and Social Class: Issues of Exclusion and Inclusion (RoutledgeFalmer, 2003) (ISBN 0-415-27644-6)
  • Aronowitz, Stanley, How Class Works: Power and Social Movement, Yale University Press, 2003. ISBN 0-300-10504-5
  • Barbrook, Richard (2006). (paperback ed.). London: OpenMute. ISBN 978-0-9550664-7-4. Archived from the original on 1 August 2018. Retrieved 15 March 2022.
  • Beckert, Sven, and Julia B. Rosenbaum, eds. The American Bourgeoisie: Distinction and Identity in the Nineteenth Century (Palgrave Macmillan; 2011) 284 pages; Scholarly studies on the habits, manners, networks, institutions, and public roles of the American middle class with a focus on cities in the North.
  • Benschop, Albert. Classes – Transformational Class Analysis (Amsterdam: Spinhuis; 1993/2012).
  • Bertaux, Daniel & Thomson, Paul; Pathways to Social Class: A Qualitative Approach to Social Mobility (Clarendon Press, 1997)
  • Bisson, Thomas N.; Cultures of Power: Lordship, Status, and Process in Twelfth-Century Europe (University of Pennsylvania Press, 1995)
  • Blackledge, Paul (2011). . Socialist Review. Vol. 364. London. Archived from the original on 10 December 2011.
  • Blau, Peter & Duncan Otis D.; The American Occupational Structure (1967) classic study of structure and mobility
  • Brady, David "Rethinking the Sociological Measurement of Poverty" Social Forces Vol. 81 No.3, (March 2003), pp. 715–51 (abstract online 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine in Project Muse).
  • Broom, Leonard & Jones, F. Lancaster; Opportunity and Attainment in Australia (1977)
  • Cohen, Lizabeth; Consumer's Republic, (Knopf, 2003) (ISBN 0-375-40750-2). (Historical analysis of the working out of class in the United States).
  • Connell, R.W and Irving, T.H., 1992. Class Structure in Australian History: Poverty and Progress. Longman Cheshire.
  • de Ste. Croix, Geoffrey (July–August 1984). "Class in Marx's conception of history, ancient and modern". New Left Review. I (146): 94–111. (Good study of Marx's concept.)
  • Dargin, Justin , Asia Times (2007) (good study of contemporary class formation in Russia, post communism)
  • Day, Gary; Class, (Routledge, 2001) (ISBN 0-415-18222-0)
  • Domhoff, G. William, Who Rules America? Power, Politics, and Social Change, Englewood Cliffs, NJ : Prentice-Hall, 1967. (Prof. Domhoff's companion site to the book at the University of California, Santa Cruz)
  • Eichar, Douglas M.; Occupation and Class Consciousness in America (Greenwood Press, 1989)
  • Fantasia, Rick; Levine, Rhonda F.; McNall, Scott G., eds.; Bringing Class Back in Contemporary and Historical Perspectives (Westview Press, 1991)
  • Featherman, David L. & Hauser Robert M.; Opportunity and Change (1978).
  • Fotopoulos, Takis, Class Divisions Today: The Inclusive Democracy approach, Democracy & Nature, Vol. 6, No. 2, (July 2000)
  • Fussell, Paul; Class (a painfully accurate guide through the American status system), (1983) (ISBN 0-345-31816-1)
  • Giddens, Anthony; The Class Structure of the Advanced Societies, (London: Hutchinson, 1981).
  • Giddens, Anthony & Mackenzie, Gavin (Eds.), Social Class and the Division of Labour. Essays in Honour of Ilya Neustadt (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1982).
  • Goldthorpe, John H. & Erikson Robert; The Constant Flux: A Study of Class Mobility in Industrial Society (1992)
  • Grusky, David B. ed.; Social Stratification: Class, Race, and Gender in Sociological Perspective (2001) scholarly articles
  • Hazelrigg, Lawrence E. & Lopreato, Joseph; Class, Conflict, and Mobility: Theories and Studies of Class Structure (1972).
  • Hymowitz, Kay; Marriage and Caste in America: Separate and Unequal Families in a Post-Marital Age (2006) ISBN 1-56663-709-0
  • Kaeble, Helmut; Social Mobility in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries: Europe and America in Comparative Perspective (1985)
  • Jakopovich, Daniel, The Concept of Class, Cambridge Studies in Social Research, No. 14, Social Science Research Group, University of Cambridge, 2014
  • Jens Hoff, "The Concept of Class and Public Employees". Acta Sociologica, vol. 28, no. 3, July 1985, pp. 207–26.
  • Mahalingam, Ramaswami; "Essentialism, Culture, and Power: Representations of Social Class" Journal of Social Issues, Vol. 59, (2003), pp. 733+ on India
  • Mahony, Pat & Zmroczek, Christine; Class Matters: 'Working-Class' Women's Perspectives on Social Class (Taylor & Francis, 1997)
  • Manza, Jeff & Brooks, Clem; Social Cleavages and Political Change: Voter Alignments and U.S. Party Coalitions (Oxford University Press, 1999).
  • Manza, Jeff; "Political Sociological Models of the U.S. New Deal" Annual Review of Sociology, (2000) pp. 297+
  • Manza, Jeff; Hout, Michael; Clem, Brooks (1995). "Class Voting in Capitalist Democracies since World War II: Dealignment, Realignment, or Trendless Fluctuation?". Annual Review of Sociology. 21: 137–62. doi:10.1146/annurev.soc.21.1.137.
  • Marmot, Michael; The Status Syndrome: How Social Standing Affects Our Health and Longevity (2004)
  • Marx, Karl & Engels, Frederick; The Communist Manifesto, (1848). (The key statement of class conflict as the driver of historical change).
  • Merriman, John M.; Consciousness and Class Experience in Nineteenth-Century Europe (Holmes & Meier Publishers, 1979)
  • Ostrander, Susan A.; Women of the Upper Class (Temple University Press, 1984).
  • Owensby, Brian P.; Intimate Ironies: Modernity and the Making of Middle-Class Lives in Brazil (Stanford University, 1999).
  • Pakulski, Jan & Waters, Malcolm; The Death of Class (Sage, 1996). (rejection of the relevance of class for modern societies)
  • Payne, Geoff; The Social Mobility of Women: Beyond Male Mobility Models (1990)
  • Savage, Mike; Class Analysis and Social Transformation (London: Open University Press, 2000).
  • Stahl, Garth; "Identity, Neoliberalism and Aspiration: Educating White Working-Class Boys" (London, Routledge, 2015).
  • Sennett, Richard & Cobb, Jonathan; The Hidden Injuries of Class, (Vintage, 1972) (classic study of the subjective experience of class).
  • Siegelbaum, Lewis H. & Suny, Ronald; eds.; Making Workers Soviet: Power, Class, and Identity. (Cornell University Press, 1994). Russia 1870–1940
  • Wlkowitz, Daniel J.; Working with Class: Social Workers and the Politics of Middle-Class Identity (University of North Carolina Press, 1999).
  • Weber, Max. "Class, Status and Party", in e.g. Gerth, Hans and C. Wright Mills, From Max Weber: Essays in Sociology, (Oxford University Press, 1958). (Weber's key statement of the multiple nature of stratification).
  • Weinburg, Mark; "The Social Analysis of Three Early 19th century French liberals: Say, Comte, and Dunoyer", Journal of Libertarian Studies, Vol. 2, No. 1, pp. 45–63, (1978).
  • Wood, Ellen Meiksins; The Retreat from Class: A New 'True' Socialism, (Schocken Books, 1986) (ISBN 0-8052-7280-1) and (Verso Classics, January 1999) reprint with new introduction (ISBN 1-85984-270-4).
  • Wood, Ellen Meiksins; , Monthly Review, Vol. 49, No. 3, (1997).
  • Wouters, Cas.; "The Integration of Social Classes". Journal of Social History. Volume 29, Issue 1, (1995). pp 107+. (on social manners)
  • Wright, Erik Olin; The Debate on Classes (Verso, 1990). (neo-Marxist)
  • Wright, Erik Olin; Class Counts: Comparative Studies in Class Analysis (Cambridge University Press, 1997)
  • Wright, Erik Olin ed. Approaches to Class Analysis (2005). (scholarly articles)
  • Zmroczek, Christine & Mahony, Pat (Eds.), Women and Social Class: International Feminist Perspectives. (London: UCL Press 1999)
  • The lower your social class, the ‘wiser’ you are, suggests new study. Science. 20 December 2017.

External links

  •   Media related to Social class at Wikimedia Commons
  • Domhoff, G. William, "The Class Domination Theory of Power", University of California, Santa Cruz
  • Graphic: How Class Works. New York Times, 2005.

social, class, class, system, redirects, here, role, playing, game, concept, character, class, this, article, needs, additional, citations, verification, please, help, improve, this, article, adding, citations, reliable, sources, unsourced, material, challenge. Class system redirects here For the role playing game concept see Character class This article needs additional citations for verification Please help improve this article by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed Find sources Social class news newspapers books scholar JSTOR April 2019 Learn how and when to remove this template message A social class is a grouping of people into a set of hierarchical social categories 1 the most common being the upper middle and lower classes Membership in a social class can for example be dependent on education wealth occupation income and belonging to a particular subculture or social network 2 From top left to bottom right or from top to bottom mobile a samurai and his servant c 1846 a butler places a telephone call 1922 The Bower Garden painting by Dante Gabriel Rossetti 1859 Class is a subject of analysis for sociologists political scientists anthropologists and social historians The term has a wide range of sometimes conflicting meanings and there is no broad consensus on a definition of class Some people argue that due to social mobility class boundaries do not exist In common parlance the term social class is usually synonymous with socio economic class defined as people having the same social economic cultural political or educational status e g the working class an emerging professional class 3 However academics distinguish social class from socioeconomic status using the former to refer to one s relatively stable sociocultural background and the latter to refer to one s current social and economic situation which is consequently more changeable over time 4 The precise measurements of what determines social class in society have varied over time Karl Marx thought class was defined by one s relationship to the means of production their relations of production His understanding of classes in modern capitalist society is that the proletariat work but do not own the means of production and the bourgeoisie those who invest and live off the surplus generated by the proletariat s operation of the means of production do not work at all This contrasts with the view of the sociologist Max Weber who argued that class is determined by economic position in contrast to social status or Stand which is determined by social prestige rather than simply just relations of production 5 The term class is etymologically derived from the Latin classis which was used by census takers to categorize citizens by wealth in order to determine military service obligations 6 In the late 18th century the term class began to replace classifications such as estates rank and orders as the primary means of organizing society into hierarchical divisions fact or opinion This corresponded to a general decrease in significance ascribed to hereditary characteristics and increase in the significance of wealth and income as indicators of position in the social hierarchy 7 8 Contents 1 History 1 1 Ancient Egypt 1 2 Elsewhere 2 Class society 2 1 Comparative sociological research 2 2 Effect on the population 3 Theoretical models 3 1 Marxist 3 2 Weberian 3 3 Bourdieu 3 4 Great British Class Survey 3 5 Three level economic class model 3 5 1 Upper class 3 5 2 Middle class 3 5 3 Lower class 4 Consequences of class position 4 1 Social privilege 4 2 Education 4 3 Health and nutrition 4 4 Employment 5 Class conflict 6 Classless society 7 Relationship between ethnicity and class 8 See also 9 Notes 10 References 11 Bibliography 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory EditAncient Egypt Edit The existence of a class system dates back to times of Ancient Egypt where the position of elite was also characterized by literacy 9 The wealthier people were at the top in the social order and common people and slaves being at the bottom 10 However the class was not rigid a man of humble origins could ascend to a high post 11 38 The ancient Egyptians viewed men and women including people from all social classes as essentially equal under the law and even the lowliest peasant was entitled to petition the vizier and his court for redress 12 Farmers made up the bulk of the population but agricultural produce was owned directly by the state temple or noble family that owned the land 13 383 Farmers were also subject to a labor tax and were required to work on irrigation or construction projects in a corvee system 14 136 Artists and craftsmen were of higher status than farmers but they were also under state control working in the shops attached to the temples and paid directly from the state treasury Scribes and officials formed the upper class in ancient Egypt known as the white kilt class in reference to the bleached linen garments that served as a mark of their rank 15 109 The upper class prominently displayed their social status in art and literature Below the nobility were the priests physicians and engineers with specialized training in their field It is unclear whether slavery as understood today existed in ancient Egypt there is difference of opinions among authors 16 Slave beating in ancient Egypt Not a single Egyptian was in our sense of the word free No individual could call in question a hierarchy of authority which culminated in a living god Emile Durkheim 11 Although slaves were mostly used as indentured servants they were able to buy and sell their servitude work their way to freedom or nobility and were usually treated by doctors in the workplace 17 Elsewhere Edit In Ancient Greece when the clan system a was declining The classes b replaced the clan society when it became too small to sustain the needs of increasing population The division of labor is also essential for the growth of classes 11 39 Burmese nobles and servants Nigerian warriors armed with spears in the retinue of a mounted war chief The Earth and Its Inhabitants 1892 Historically social class and behavior were laid down in law For example permitted mode of dress in some times and places was strictly regulated with sumptuous dressing only for the high ranks of society and aristocracy whereas sumptuary laws stipulated the dress and jewelry appropriate for a person s social rank and station In Europe these laws became increasingly commonplace during the Middle Ages However these laws were prone to change due to societal changes and in many cases these distinctions may either almost disappear such as the distinction between a patrician and a plebeian being almost erased during the late Roman Republic Jean Jacques Rousseau had a large influence over political ideals of the French Revolution because of his views of inequality and classes Rousseau saw humans as naturally pure and good meaning that humans from birth were seen as innocent and any evilness was learned He believed that social problems arise through the development of society and suppress the innate pureness of humankind He also believed that private property is the main reason for social issues in society because private property creates inequality through the property s value Even though his theory predicted if there were no private property then there would be wide spread equality Rousseau accepted that there will always be social inequality because of how society is viewed and run 18 Later Enlightenment thinkers viewed inequality as valuable and crucial to society s development and prosperity They also acknowledged that private property will ultimately cause inequality because specific resources that are privately owned can be stored and the owners profit off of the deficit of the resource This can create competition between the classes that was seen as necessary by these thinkers 18 This also creates stratification between the classes keeping a distinct difference between lower poorer classes and the higher wealthier classes India Nepal North Korea Sri Lanka and some Indigenous peoples maintain social classes today In class societies class conflict has tended to recur or is ongoing depending on the sociological and anthropolitical perspective 19 20 Class societies have not always existed there have been widely different types of class communities 21 22 23 For example societies based on age rather than capital 24 During colonialism social relations were dismantled by force which gave rise to societies based on the social categories of waged labor private property and capital 24 25 Class society EditClass society or class based society is an organizing principle society in which ownership of property means of production and wealth is the determining factor of the distribution of power in which those with more property and wealth are stratified higher in the society and those without access to the means of production and without wealth are stratified lower in the society In a class society at least implicitly people are divided into distinct social strata commonly referred to as social classes or castes The nature of class society is a matter of sociological research 26 27 28 Class societies exist all over the globe in both industrialized and developing nations 29 Class stratification is theorized to come directly from capitalism 30 In terms of public opinion nine out of ten people in a Swedish survey considered it correct that they are living in a class society 31 Comparative sociological research Edit One may use comparative methods to study class societies using for example comparison of Gini coefficients de facto educational opportunities unemployment and culture 32 33 Effect on the population Edit Societies with large class differences have a greater proportion of people who suffer from mental health issues such as anxiety and depression symptoms 34 35 36 A series of scientific studies have demonstrated this relationship 37 Statistics support this assertion and results are found in life expectancy and overall health for example in the case of high differences in life expectancy between two Stockholm suburbs The differences between life expectancy of the poor and less well educated inhabitants who live in proximity to the station Varby gard and the highly educated and more affluent inhabitants living near Danderyd differ by 18 years 38 39 Similar data about New York is also available for life expectancy average income per capita income distribution median income mobility for people who grew up poor share with a bachelor s degree or higher 40 In class societies the lower classes systematically receive lower quality education and care 41 42 43 There are more explicit effects where those within the higher class actively demonize parts of the lower class population 33 Theoretical models EditDefinitions of social classes reflect a number of sociological perspectives informed by anthropology economics psychology and sociology The major perspectives historically have been Marxism and structural functionalism The common stratum model of class divides society into a simple hierarchy of working class middle class and upper class Within academia two broad schools of definitions emerge those aligned with 20th century sociological stratum models of class society and those aligned with the 19th century historical materialist economic models of the Marxists and anarchists 44 45 46 Another distinction can be drawn between analytical concepts of social class such as the Marxist and Weberian traditions as well as the more empirical traditions such as socioeconomic status approach which notes the correlation of income education and wealth with social outcomes without necessarily implying a particular theory of social structure 47 Further information People accounting hypothesis Marxist Edit Main articles Class in Marxist theory and Communist society Classes are large groups of people differing from each other by the place they occupy in a historically determined system of social production by their relation in most cases fixed and formulated in law to the means of production by their role in the social organization of labor and consequently by the dimensions of the share of social wealth of which they dispose and the mode of acquiring it Vladimir Lenin A Great Beginning on June 1919 For Marx class is a combination of objective and subjective factors Objectively a class shares a common relationship to the means of production The class society itself is understood as the aggregated phenomenon to the interlinked movement which generates the quasi objective concept of capital 48 Subjectively the members will necessarily have some perception class consciousness of their similarity and common interest Class consciousness is not simply an awareness of one s own class interest but is also a set of shared views regarding how society should be organized legally culturally socially and politically These class relations are reproduced through time In Marxist theory the class structure of the capitalist mode of production is characterized by the conflict between two main classes the bourgeoisie the capitalists who own the means of production and the much larger proletariat or working class who must sell their own labour power wage labour This is the fundamental economic structure of work and property a state of inequality that is normalized and reproduced through cultural ideology For Marxists every person in the process of production has separate social relationships and issues Along with this every person is placed into different groups that have similar interests and values that can differ drastically from group to group Class is special in that does not relate to specifically to a singular person but to a specific role 18 Marxists explain the history of civilized societies in terms of a war of classes between those who control production and those who produce the goods or services in society In the Marxist view of capitalism this is a conflict between capitalists bourgeoisie and wage workers the proletariat For Marxists class antagonism is rooted in the situation that control over social production necessarily entails control over the class which produces goods in capitalism this is the exploitation of workers by the bourgeoisie 49 Furthermore in countries where modern civilisation has become fully developed a new class of petty bourgeois has been formed 50 An industrial army of workmen under the command of a capitalist requires like a real army officers managers and sergeants foremen over lookers who while the work is being done command in the name of the capitalist 51 Marx makes the argument that as the bourgeoisie reach a point of wealth accumulation they hold enough power as the dominant class to shape political institutions and society according to their own interests Marx then goes on to claim that the non elite class owing to their large numbers have the power to overthrow the elite and create an equal society 52 In The Communist Manifesto Marx himself argued that it was the goal of the proletariat itself to displace the capitalist system with socialism changing the social relationships underpinning the class system and then developing into a future communist society in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all This would mark the beginning of a classless society in which human needs rather than profit would be motive for production In a society with democratic control and production for use there would be no class no state and no need for financial and banking institutions and money 53 54 These theorists have taken this binary class system and expanded it to include contradictory class locations the idea that a person can be employed in many different class locations that fall between the two classes of proletariat and bourgeoisie Erik Olin Wright stated that class definitions are more diverse and elaborate through identifying with multiple classes having familial ties with people in different a class or having a temporary leadership role 18 Weberian Edit Main article Three component theory of stratification Max Weber formulated a three component theory of stratification that saw social class as emerging from an interplay between class status and power Weber believed that class position was determined by a person s relationship to the means of production while status or Stand emerged from estimations of honor or prestige 55 Weber views class as a group of people who have common goals and opportunities that are available to them This means that what separates each class from each other is their value in the marketplace through their own goods and services This creates a divide between the classes through the assets that they have such as property and expertise 18 Weber derived many of his key concepts on social stratification by examining the social structure of many countries He noted that contrary to Marx s theories stratification was based on more than simply ownership of capital Weber pointed out that some members of the aristocracy lack economic wealth yet might nevertheless have political power Likewise in Europe many wealthy Jewish families lacked prestige and honor because they were considered members of a pariah group Class A person s economic position in a society Weber differs from Marx in that he does not see this as the supreme factor in stratification Weber noted how managers of corporations or industries control firms they do not own Status A person s prestige social honour or popularity in a society Weber noted that political power was not rooted in capital value solely but also in one s status Poets and saints for example can possess immense influence on society with often little economic worth Power A person s ability to get their way despite the resistance of others For example individuals in state jobs such as an employee of the Federal Bureau of Investigation or a member of the United States Congress may hold little property or status but they still hold immense power Bourdieu Edit Main article Bourdieu Theory of capital and class distinction For Bourdieu the place in the social strata for any person is vaguer than the equivalent in Weberian sociology Bourdieu introduced an array of concepts of what he refers to as types of capital These types were economic capital in the form assets convertible to money and secured as private property This type of capital is separated from the other types of culturally constituted types of capital which Bourdieu introduces which are personal cultural capital formal education knowledge objective cultural capital books art and institutionalized cultural capital honours and titles Great British Class Survey Edit Main article Great British Class Survey On 2 April 2013 the results of a survey 56 conducted by BBC Lab UK developed in collaboration with academic experts and slated to be published in the journal Sociology were published online 57 58 59 60 61 The results released were based on a survey of 160 000 residents of the United Kingdom most of whom lived in England and described themselves as white Class was defined and measured according to the amount and kind of economic cultural and social resources reported Economic capital was defined as income and assets cultural capital as amount and type of cultural interests and activities and social capital as the quantity and social status of their friends family and personal and business contacts 60 This theoretical framework was developed by Pierre Bourdieu who first published his theory of social distinction in 1979 Three level economic class model Edit Today concepts of social class often assume three general economic categories a very wealthy and powerful upper class that owns and controls the means of production a middle class of professional workers small business owners and low level managers and a lower class who rely on low paying jobs for their livelihood and experience poverty Upper class Edit Main article Upper class See also Elite Aristocracy Oligarchy Business magnate and Ruling class A symbolic image of three orders of feudal society in Europe prior to the French Revolution which shows the rural third estate carrying the clergy and the nobility The upper class 62 is the social class composed of those who are rich well born powerful or a combination of those They usually wield the greatest political power In some countries wealth alone is sufficient to allow entry into the upper class In others only people who are born or marry into certain aristocratic bloodlines are considered members of the upper class and those who gain great wealth through commercial activity are looked down upon by the aristocracy as nouveau riche 63 In the United Kingdom for example the upper classes are the aristocracy and royalty with wealth playing a less important role in class status Many aristocratic peerages or titles have seats attached to them with the holder of the title e g Earl of Bristol and his family being the custodians of the house but not the owners Many of these require high expenditures so wealth is typically needed Many aristocratic peerages and their homes are parts of estates owned and run by the title holder with moneys generated by the land rents or other sources of wealth However in the United States where there is no aristocracy or royalty the upper class status exclusive of Americans of ancestral wealth or patricians of European ancestry is referred to in the media as the extremely wealthy the so called super rich though there is some tendency even in the United States for those with old family wealth to look down on those who have accrued their money through business the struggle between new money and old money The upper class is generally contained within the richest one or two percent of the population Members of the upper class are often born into it and are distinguished by immense wealth which is passed from generation to generation in the form of estates 64 Based on some new social and political theories upper class consists of the most wealthy decile group in society which holds nearly 87 of the whole society s wealth 65 Middle class Edit Main articles Middle class Upper middle class Lower middle class and BourgeoisieSee also Middle class squeezeThe middle class is the most contested of the three categories the broad group of people in contemporary society who fall socio economically between the lower and upper classes 66 One example of the contest of this term is that in the United States middle class is applied very broadly and includes people who would elsewhere be considered working class Middle class workers are sometimes called white collar workers Theorists such as Ralf Dahrendorf have noted the tendency toward an enlarged middle class in modern Western societies particularly in relation to the necessity of an educated work force in technological economies 67 Perspectives concerning globalization and neocolonialism such as dependency theory suggest this is due to the shift of low level labour to developing nations and the Third World 68 Middle class is the group of people with typical everyday jobs that pay significantly more than the poverty line Examples of these types of jobs are factory workers salesperson teacher cooks and nurses There is a new trend by some scholars which assumes that the size of the middle class in every society is the same For example in paradox of interest theory middle class are those who are in 6th 9th decile groups which hold nearly 12 of the whole society s wealth 69 Lower class Edit In many countries the lowest stratum of the working class the underclass often lives in urban areas with low quality civil services Main articles Working class and Proletariat See also Precarity Lower class occasionally described as working class are those employed in low paying wage jobs with very little economic security The term lower class also refers to persons with low income The working class is sometimes separated into those who are employed but lacking financial security the working poor and an underclass those who are long term unemployed and or homeless especially those receiving welfare from the state The latter is today considered analogous to the Marxist term lumpenproletariat However during the time of Marx s writing the lumpenproletariat referred to those in dire poverty such as the homeless 62 Members of the working class are sometimes called blue collar workers Consequences of class position EditThis article may contain an excessive number of citations Please consider removing references to unnecessary or disreputable sources merging citations where possible or if necessary flagging the content for deletion April 2022 Learn how and when to remove this template message A person s socioeconomic class has wide ranging effects It can determine the schools they are able to attend 70 71 72 73 74 75 their health 76 the jobs open to them 70 when they exit the labour market 77 whom they may marry 78 and their treatment by police and the courts 79 Angus Deaton and Anne Case have analyzed the mortality rates related to the group of white middle aged Americans between the ages of 45 and 54 and its relation to class There has been a growing number of suicides and deaths by substance abuse in this particular group of middle class Americans This group also has been recorded to have an increase in reports of chronic pain and poor general health Deaton and Case came to the conclusion from these observations that because of the constant stress that these white middle aged Americans feel fighting poverty and wavering between the middle and lower classes these strains have taken a toll on these people and affected their whole bodies 76 Social classifications can also determine the sporting activities that such classes take part in It is suggested that those of an upper social class are more likely to take part in sporting activities whereas those of a lower social background are less likely to participate in sport However upper class people tend to not take part in certain sports that have been commonly known to be linked with the lower class 80 Social privilege Edit Main article Social privilege Education Edit A person s social class has a significant effect on their educational opportunities Not only are upper class parents able to send their children to exclusive schools that are perceived to be better but in many places state supported schools for children of the upper class are of a much higher quality than those the state provides for children of the lower classes 81 82 83 84 85 86 This lack of good schools is one factor that perpetuates the class divide across generations In the UK the educational consequences of class position have been discussed by scholars inspired by the cultural studies framework of the CCCS and or especially regarding working class girls feminist theory On working class boys Paul Willis 1977 book Learning to Labour How Working Class Kids Get Working Class Jobs is seen within the British Cultural Studies field as a classic discussion of their antipathy to the acquisition of knowledge 87 Beverley Skeggs described Learning to Labour as a study on the irony of how the process of cultural and economic reproduction is made possible by the lads celebration of the hard macho world of work 88 Health and nutrition Edit Main article Social determinants of health A person s social class often affects their physical health their ability to receive adequate medical care and nutrition and their life expectancy 89 90 91 Lower class people experience a wide array of health problems as a result of their economic status They are unable to use health care as often and when they do it is of lower quality even though they generally tend to experience a much higher rate of health issues Lower class families have higher rates of infant mortality cancer cardiovascular disease and disabling physical injuries Additionally poor people tend to work in much more hazardous conditions yet generally have much less if any health insurance provided for them as compared to middle and upper class workers 92 Employment Edit The conditions at a person s job vary greatly depending on class Those in the upper middle class and middle class enjoy greater freedoms in their occupations They are usually more respected enjoy more diversity and are able to exhibit some authority 93 Those in lower classes tend to feel more alienated and have lower work satisfaction overall The physical conditions of the workplace differ greatly between classes While middle class workers may suffer alienating conditions or lack of job satisfaction blue collar workers are more apt to suffer alienating often routine work with obvious physical health hazards injury and even death 94 In the UK a 2015 government study by the Social Mobility Commission suggested the existence of a glass floor in British society preventing those who are less able but who come from wealthier backgrounds from slipping down the social ladder The report proposed a 35 greater likelihood of less able better off children becoming high earners than bright poor children 95 Class conflict EditMain article Class conflict Class conflict frequently referred to as class warfare or class struggle is the tension or antagonism which exists in society due to competing socioeconomic interests and desires between people of different classes For Marx the history of class society was a history of class conflict He pointed to the successful rise of the bourgeoisie and the necessity of revolutionary violence a heightened form of class conflict in securing the bourgeois rights that supported the capitalist economy Marx believed that the exploitation and poverty inherent in capitalism were a pre existing form of class conflict Marx believed that wage labourers would need to revolt to bring about a more equitable distribution of wealth and political power 96 97 Classless society EditMain article Classless society A classless society is one in which no one is born into a social class Distinctions of wealth income education culture or social network might arise and would only be determined by individual experience and achievement in such a society Since these distinctions are difficult to avoid advocates of a classless society such as anarchists and communists propose various means to achieve and maintain it and attach varying degrees of importance to it as an end in their overall programs philosophy Relationship between ethnicity and class EditFurther information Racial inequality Equestrian portrait of Empress Elizabeth of Russia with a Moor servant Race and other large scale groupings can also influence class standing The association of particular ethnic groups with class statuses is common in many societies and is linked with race as well 98 Class and ethnicity can impact a persons or communities Socioeconomic standing which in turn influences everything including job availability and the quality of available health and education 98 The labels ascribed to an individual change the way others perceive them with multiple labels associated with stigma combining to worsen the social consequences of being labelled 99 As a result of conquest or internal ethnic differentiation a ruling class is often ethnically homogenous and particular races or ethnic groups in some societies are legally or customarily restricted to occupying particular class positions Which ethnicities are considered as belonging to high or low classes varies from society to society In modern societies strict legal links between ethnicity and class have been drawn such as the caste system in Africa apartheid the position of the Burakumin in Japanese society and the casta system in Latin America citation needed See also Edit Society portalClass stratification Caste Drift hypothesis Elite theory Elitism Four occupations Health equity Hostile architecture Inca society Korean ruling class Mass society National Statistics Socio economic Classification Passing sociology Post industrial society Ranked society Raznochintsy Psychology of social class Social stratification Welfare stateNotes Edit based on blood relations based on occupationReferences Edit Grant J Andrew 2001 class definition of In Jones R J Barry ed Routledge Encyclopedia of International Political Economy Entries A F Taylor amp Francis p 161 ISBN 978 0 415 24350 6 The Class Structure in the U S Boundless Sociology courses lumenlearning com Retrieved 5 March 2021 Princeton University Social class WordNet Search 3 1 Retrieved on 2012 01 25 Rubin M Denson N Kilpatrick S Matthews K E Stehlik T amp Zyngier D 2014 I am working class Subjective self definition as a missing measure of social class and socioeconomic status in higher education research Educational Researcher 43 4 196 200 doi 10 3102 0013189X14528373 hdl 1959 13 1043609 S2CID 145576929 a href Template Cite journal html title Template Cite journal cite journal a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Weber Max 1921 2015 Classes Stande Parties in Weber s Rationalism and Modern Society New Translations on Politics Bureaucracy and Social Stratification Edited and Translated by Tony Waters and Dagmar Waters pp 37 58 Brown D F 2009 Social class and Status In Mey Jacob ed Concise Encyclopedia of Pragmatics Elsevier p 952 ISBN 978 0 08 096297 9 Kuper Adam ed 2004 Class Social The social science encyclopedia Taylor amp Francis p 111 ISBN 978 0 415 32096 2 Penney Robert 2003 Class social In Christensen Karen Levinson David eds Encyclopedia of community from the village to the virtual world Volume 1 SAGE p 189 ISBN 978 0 7619 2598 9 Barbara Mendoza 5 October 2017 Artifacts from Ancient Egypt ABC CLIO pp 216 ISBN 978 1 4408 4401 0 Tracey Baptiste 15 December 2015 The Totally Gross History of Ancient Egypt The Rosen Publishing Group Inc pp 5 ISBN 978 1 4994 3755 3 a b c Keller Suzanne 2017 Beyond the Ruling Class Strategic Elites in Modern Society Routledge ISBN 9781351289184 Johnson Janet H 2002 Women s Legal Rights in Ancient Egypt Fathom Archive University of Chicago Manuelian Peter Der 1998 Regine Schulz Matthias Seidel eds Egypt The World of the Pharaohs Cologne Germany Konemann ISBN 978 3 89508 913 8 James T G H 2005 The British Museum Concise Introduction to Ancient Egypt University of Michigan Press ISBN 978 0 472 03137 5 Billard Jules B 1978 Ancient Egypt Discovering Its Splendors National Geographic Society ISBN 9780870442209 Social classes in ancient Egypt Digital Egypt for Universities University College London 2003 Archived from the original on 13 December 2007 Slavery An introduction to the history and culture of Pharaonic Egypt Archived from the original on 30 August 2012 a b c d e Conley Dalton 2017 Stratification In Bakeman Karl ed You May Ask Yourself An Introduction to Thinking like a Sociologist 5th ed W W Norton amp Company Inc ISBN 978 0393614275 The concise encyclopedia of sociology Wiley Blackwell 2011 p 66 ISBN 978 1 4443 9263 0 OCLC 701327736 Weapons of the weak everyday forms of peasant resistance ISBN 978 0 585 36330 1 OCLC 317459153 EVOLUTION OF PROPERTY FROM SAVAGERY TO CIVILIZATION HANSEBOOKS 2017 ISBN 978 3 337 31218 3 OCLC 1104923720 Ancient society Transaction Publishers 2000 ISBN 0 7658 0691 6 OCLC 44516641 Encyclopedia of Western colonialism since 1450 Macmillan Reference USA 2007 pp 620 849 921 64 ISBN 978 0 02 866085 1 OCLC 74840473 a b Age class systems social institutions and polities based on age Cambridge University Press 1985 ISBN 0 521 30747 3 OCLC 11621536 Bhandar Brenna 2014 Property Law and Race Modes of Abstraction UC Irvine Law Review 4 1 203 218 ISSN 2327 4514 Retrieved 11 November 2022 Drobnic S Guillen A 2011 Work Life Balance in Europe The Role of Job Quality Springer p 208 ISBN 9780230307582 Essays on Social Reproduction and Lifelong Learning Skolporten 14 April 2010 Retrieved 14 May 2020 Bihagen Erik Nermo Magnus Stern Charlotta October 2013 Class Origin and Elite Position of Men in Business Firms in Sweden 1993 2007 The Importance of Education Cognitive Ability and Personality European Sociological Review 29 5 939 954 doi 10 1093 esr jcs070 Global Stratification and Inequality Introduction to Sociology courses lumenlearning com Retrieved 1 June 2020 Lane David 1 December 2005 Social class as a factor in the transformation of state socialism Journal of Communist Studies and Transition Politics 21 4 417 435 doi 10 1080 13523270500363361 ISSN 1352 3279 S2CID 154779478 Klassamhallet ater anser 9 av 10 Svenska Dagbladet in Swedish 26 April 2004 ISSN 1101 2412 Cribb Jonathan 1 February 2013 Income inequality in the UK Institute for Fiscal Studies Retrieved 11 November 2022 a b Jones Owen Peter 2011 Chavs the demonization of the working class with new preface New ed ISBN 978 1 78168 398 9 OCLC 1105199910 Wilkinson Richard G Pickett Kate 2019 The inner level how more equal societies reduce stress restore sanity and improve everyone s well being Penguin Books ISBN 978 0 14 197539 9 OCLC 1091644373 Salmi Peter 13 December 2017 Kraftig okning av psykisk ohalsa bland barn och unga vuxna Socialstyrelsen in Swedish Archived from the original on 21 February 2018 Mathisen Daniel 8 June 2018 Inte konstigt att klassamhallet far oss att ma daligt in Swedish Archived from the original on 20 June 2019 Retrieved 14 May 2020 Aneshensel Carol S Phelan Jo C 1999 Handbook of the sociology of mental health Kluwer Academic Plenum Publishers p 152 ISBN 978 0 387 36223 6 OCLC 552063104 Var du bor avgor nar du dor in Swedish 12 May 2014 Mera om massiva och dodliga klasskillnader Svenska Dagbladet in Swedish 29 June 2019 ISSN 1101 2412 Leonhardt David Serkez Yaryna 13 May 2020 Opinion What Does Opportunity Look Like Where You Live The New York Times Skillnad mellan rika och fattigas overlevnad i brostcancer www dagensmedicin se Closing the gap in a generation health equity through action on the social determinants of health Commission on Social Determinants of Health final report World Health Organization Commission on Social Determinants of Health 2008 ISBN 978 92 4 156370 3 OCLC 248038286 Fattiga klarar cancer samst Svenska Dagbladet in Swedish 8 September 2008 ISSN 1101 2412 Serravallo Vincent 2008 Class In Parrillo Vincent N ed Encyclopedia of social problems Volume 1 SAGE p 131 ISBN 978 1 4129 4165 5 Gilbert Dennis 1998 The American Class Structure New York Wadsworth Publishing ISBN 978 0 534 50520 2 Williams Brian Stacey C Sawyer Carl M Wahlstrom 2005 Marriages Families amp Intimate Relationships Boston Pearson ISBN 978 0 205 36674 3 John Scott Class critical concepts 1996 Volume 2 P 310 Postone Moishe 1993 Time Labor and Social Domination A Reinterpretation of Marx s Critical Theory via libcom org Cambridge University Press ISBN 0 521 39157 1 OCLC 26853972 Karl Marx amp Friedrich Engels Manifesto of the Communist Party Selected Works Volume 1 London 1943 p 231 Karl Marx amp Friedrich Engels Manifesto of the Communist Party Selected Works Volume 1 London 1943 p 231 Karl Marx Capital An Analysis of Capitalist Production Volume 1 Moscow 1959 p 332 Manifesto of the Communist Party www marxists org Retrieved 9 December 2015 Karl Marx amp Friedrich Engels Manifesto of the Communist Party Selected Works Volume 1 London 1943 p 232 234 Karl Marx Critique of the Gotha Program 1875 Weber Max 2015 1921 Classes Stande Parties in Weber s Rationalism and Modern Society edited and translated by Tony Waters and Dagmar Waters pp 37 57 Britain s Real Class System Great British Class Survey BBC Lab UK Retrieved 4 April 2013 Savage Mike Devine Fiona Cunningham Niall Taylor Mark Li Yaojun Johs Hjellbrekke Brigitte Le Roux Friedman Sam Miles Andrew 2 April 2013 A New Model of Social Class Findings from the BBC s Great British Class Survey Experiment PDF Sociology 47 2 219 50 doi 10 1177 0038038513481128 S2CID 85546872 The Great British class calculator People in the UK now fit into seven social classes a major survey conducted by the BBC suggests BBC 3 April 2013 Retrieved 4 April 2013 Savage Mike Devine Fiona 3 April 2013 The Great British class calculator Sociologists are interested in the idea that class is about your cultural tastes and activities as well as the type and number of people you know BBC Retrieved 4 April 2013 a b Savage Mike Devine Fiona 3 April 2013 The Great British class calculator Mike Savage from the London School of Economics and Fiona Devine from the University of Manchester describe their findings from The Great British Class Survey Their results identify a new model of class with seven classes ranging from the Elite at the top to a Precariat at the bottom BBC Retrieved 4 April 2013 Lyall Sarah 3 April 2013 Multiplying the Old Divisions of Class in Britain The New York Times Retrieved 4 April 2013 a b Brown D F 2009 Social class and Status In Mey Jacob ed Concise Encyclopedia of Pragmatics Elsevier p 953 ISBN 978 0 08 096297 9 The Random House Dictionary of the English Language nouveau riche French Usually Disparaging a person who is newly rich 1969 Random House Akhbar Williams Tahira 2010 Class Structure In Smith Jessie C ed Encyclopedia of African American Popular Culture Volume 1 ABC CLIO p 322 ISBN 978 0 313 35796 1 Baizidi Rahim 2 September 2019 Paradoxical class paradox of interest and political conservatism in middle class Asian Journal of Political Science 27 3 272 285 doi 10 1080 02185377 2019 1642772 ISSN 0218 5377 S2CID 199308683 Stearns Peter N ed 1994 Middle class Encyclopedia of social history Taylor amp Francis p 621 ISBN 978 0 8153 0342 8 Dahrendorf Ralf 1959 Class and Class Conflict in Industrial Society Stanford Stanford University Press Bornschier V 1996 Western society in transition New Brunswick N J Transaction Publishers Baizidi Rahim 17 July 2019 Paradoxical class paradox of interest and political conservatism in middle class Asian Journal of Political Science 27 3 272 285 doi 10 1080 02185377 2019 1642772 ISSN 0218 5377 S2CID 199308683 a b Escarce Jose J October 2003 Socioeconomic Status and the Fates of Adolescents Health Services Research 38 5 1229 34 doi 10 1111 1475 6773 00173 ISSN 0017 9124 PMC 1360943 PMID 14596387 Wilbur Tabitha G Roscigno Vincent J 31 August 2016 First generation Disadvantage and College Enrollment Completion Socius 2 2378023116664351 doi 10 1177 2378023116664351 ISSN 2378 0231 DiMaggio Paul 1982 Cultural Capital and School Success The Impact of Status Culture Participation on the Grades of U S High School Students American Sociological Review 47 2 189 201 doi 10 2307 2094962 JSTOR 2094962 Buchmann Claudia DiPrete Thomas A 23 June 2016 The Growing Female Advantage in College Completion The Role of Family Background and Academic Achievement American Sociological Review 71 4 515 41 CiteSeerX 10 1 1 487 8265 doi 10 1177 000312240607100401 S2CID 53390724 Grodsky Eric Riegle Crumb Catherine 1 January 2010 Those Who Choose and Those Who Don t Social Background and College Orientation The Annals of the American Academy of Political and Social Science 627 1 14 35 doi 10 1177 0002716209348732 ISSN 0002 7162 S2CID 145193811 Hurst Allison L 2009 The Path to College Stories of Students from the Working Class Race Gender amp Class 16 1 2 257 81 JSTOR 41658872 a b Kolata Gina 2 November 2015 Death Rates Rising for Middle Aged White Americans Study Finds The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved 9 December 2015 Murray Emily T Carr Ewan Zaninotto Paola Head Jenny Xue Baowen Stansfeld Stephen Beach Brian Shelton Nicola 9 October 2019 Inequalities in time from stopping paid work to death findings from the ONS Longitudinal Study 2001 2011 J Epidemiol Community Health 73 12 1101 1107 doi 10 1136 jech 2019 212487 ISSN 0143 005X PMID 31611238 S2CID 204703259 Laureau A 2011 Unequal childhoods Class race and family life Univ of California Press Harris Alexes 2016 Monetary Sanctions as Punishment for the Poor A Pound of Flesh Monetary Sanctions as Punishment for the Poor Russell Sage Foundation ISBN 978 0 87154 461 2 JSTOR 10 7758 9781610448550 Wilson Thomas C 2002 The Paradox of Social Class and Sports Involvement International Review for the Sociology of Sport 37 5 16 doi 10 1177 1012690202037001001 S2CID 144129391 Jonathan Kozol Savage Inequalities Crown 1991 McDonough Patricia M 1997 Choosing colleges how social class and schools structure opportunity SUNY Press pp 1 2 ISBN 978 0 7914 3477 2 Shin Kwang Yeong amp Lee Byoung Hoon 2010 Social class and educational opportunity in South Korea In Attewell Paul Newman Katherine S eds Growing gaps educational inequality around the world Oxford University Press p 105 ISBN 978 0 19 973218 0 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link McNamee Stephen J amp Miller Robert K 2009 The meritocracy myth Rowman amp Littlefield p 199 ISBN 978 0 7425 6168 7 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Thomas Scott L amp Bell Angela 2007 Social class and higher education a reorganization of opportunities In Weis Lois ed The Way Class Works Readings on School Family and the Economy Taylor amp Francis p 273 ISBN 978 0 415 95707 6 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Sacks Peter 2007 Tearing down the gates confronting the class divide in American education University of California Press pp 112 14 ISBN 978 0 520 24588 4 a href Template Cite book html title Template Cite book cite book a CS1 maint uses authors parameter link Willis Paul 1977 Learning to Labour How Working Class Kids Get Working Class Jobs Farnborough Saxon House ISBN 978 0 5660 0150 5 Skeggs Beverley 1992 Paul Willis Learning to Labour In Barker Martin amp Beezer Anne eds Reading into Cultural Studies London Routledge p 181 ISBN 978 0 4150 6377 7 Barr Donald A 2008 Health disparities in the United States social class race ethnicity and health JHU Press pp 1 2 ISBN 978 0 8018 8821 2 Gulliford Martin 2003 Equity and access to health care In Gulliford Martin Morgan Myfanwy eds Access to health care Psychology Press p 39 ISBN 978 0 415 27546 0 Budrys Grace 2009 Unequal Health How Inequality Contributes to Health Or Illness Rowman amp Littlefield pp 183 84 ISBN 978 0 7425 6507 4 Liu William Ming 2010 Social Class and Classism in the Helping Professions Research Theory and Practice SAGE p 29 ISBN 978 1 4129 7251 2 Maclean Mairi Harvey Charles Kling Gerhard 1 June 2014 Pathways to Power Class Hyper Agency and the French Corporate Elite PDF Organization Studies 35 6 825 55 doi 10 1177 0170840613509919 ISSN 0170 8406 S2CID 145716192 Kerbo Herald 1996 Social Stratification and Inequality New York The McGraw Hill Companies Inc pp 231 33 ISBN 978 0 07 034258 3 Social Mobility and Child Poverty Commission New research exposes the glass floor in British society www gov uk Retrieved 22 September 2015 Streeter Calvin L 2008 Community In Mizrahi Terry ed Encyclopedia of social work Volume 1 Oxford University Press p 352 ISBN 978 0 19 530661 3 Hunt Stephen 2011 class conflict In Ritzer George Ryan J Michael eds The Concise Encyclopedia of Sociology John Wiley amp Sons p 66 ISBN 978 1 4051 8353 6 a b Ethnic and Racial Minorities amp Socioeconomic Status American Psychological Association 2017 Retrieved 11 November 2022 Jones Pip Bradbury Liz 2018 Introducing Social Theory Third ed Cambridge UK Polity Press pp 104 114 ISBN 978 1 5095 0504 3 Bibliography EditOjamlikhetens dimensioner Marie Evertsson amp Charlotta Magnusson red In Swedish ISBN 9789147111299 Om konsten att lyfta sig sjalv i haret och behalla barnet i badvattnet kritiska synpunkter pa samhallsvetenskapens vetenskapsteori Israel Joachim In Swedish ISBN 91 29 43746 6 The inner level how more equal societies reduce stress restore sanity and improve everyone s well being Richard G Wilkinson Kate Pickett ISBN 9780141975399 Archived copy PDF Archived from the original PDF on 29 April 2019 Retrieved 14 May 2020 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint archived copy as title link Further reading EditThis further reading section may contain inappropriate or excessive suggestions that may not follow Wikipedia s guidelines Please ensure that only a reasonable number of balanced topical reliable and notable further reading suggestions are given removing less relevant or redundant publications with the same point of view where appropriate Consider utilising appropriate texts as inline sources or creating a separate bibliography article September 2016 Learn how and when to remove this template message Archer Louise et al Higher Education and Social Class Issues of Exclusion and Inclusion RoutledgeFalmer 2003 ISBN 0 415 27644 6 Aronowitz Stanley How Class Works Power and Social Movement Yale University Press 2003 ISBN 0 300 10504 5 Barbrook Richard 2006 The Class of the New paperback ed London OpenMute ISBN 978 0 9550664 7 4 Archived from the original on 1 August 2018 Retrieved 15 March 2022 Beckert Sven and Julia B Rosenbaum eds The American Bourgeoisie Distinction and Identity in the Nineteenth Century Palgrave Macmillan 2011 284 pages Scholarly studies on the habits manners networks institutions and public roles of the American middle class with a focus on cities in the North Benschop Albert Classes Transformational Class Analysis Amsterdam Spinhuis 1993 2012 Bertaux Daniel amp Thomson Paul Pathways to Social Class A Qualitative Approach to Social Mobility Clarendon Press 1997 Bisson Thomas N Cultures of Power Lordship Status and Process in Twelfth Century Europe University of Pennsylvania Press 1995 Blackledge Paul 2011 Why workers can change the world Socialist Review Vol 364 London Archived from the original on 10 December 2011 Blau Peter amp Duncan Otis D The American Occupational Structure 1967 classic study of structure and mobility Brady David Rethinking the Sociological Measurement of Poverty Social Forces Vol 81 No 3 March 2003 pp 715 51 abstract online Archived 4 March 2016 at the Wayback Machine in Project Muse Broom Leonard amp Jones F Lancaster Opportunity and Attainment in Australia 1977 Cohen Lizabeth Consumer s Republic Knopf 2003 ISBN 0 375 40750 2 Historical analysis of the working out of class in the United States Connell R W and Irving T H 1992 Class Structure in Australian History Poverty and Progress Longman Cheshire de Ste Croix Geoffrey July August 1984 Class in Marx s conception of history ancient and modern New Left Review I 146 94 111 Good study of Marx s concept Dargin Justin The Birth of Russia s Energy Class Asia Times 2007 good study of contemporary class formation in Russia post communism Day Gary Class Routledge 2001 ISBN 0 415 18222 0 Domhoff G William Who Rules America Power Politics and Social Change Englewood Cliffs NJ Prentice Hall 1967 Prof Domhoff s companion site to the book at the University of California Santa Cruz Eichar Douglas M Occupation and Class Consciousness in America Greenwood Press 1989 Fantasia Rick Levine Rhonda F McNall Scott G eds Bringing Class Back in Contemporary and Historical Perspectives Westview Press 1991 Featherman David L amp Hauser Robert M Opportunity and Change 1978 Fotopoulos Takis Class Divisions Today The Inclusive Democracy approach Democracy amp Nature Vol 6 No 2 July 2000 Fussell Paul Class a painfully accurate guide through the American status system 1983 ISBN 0 345 31816 1 Giddens Anthony The Class Structure of the Advanced Societies London Hutchinson 1981 Giddens Anthony amp Mackenzie Gavin Eds Social Class and the Division of Labour Essays in Honour of Ilya Neustadt Cambridge Cambridge University Press 1982 Goldthorpe John H amp Erikson Robert The Constant Flux A Study of Class Mobility in Industrial Society 1992 Grusky David B ed Social Stratification Class Race and Gender in Sociological Perspective 2001 scholarly articles Hazelrigg Lawrence E amp Lopreato Joseph Class Conflict and Mobility Theories and Studies of Class Structure 1972 Hymowitz Kay Marriage and Caste in America Separate and Unequal Families in a Post Marital Age 2006 ISBN 1 56663 709 0 Kaeble Helmut Social Mobility in the Nineteenth and Twentieth Centuries Europe and America in Comparative Perspective 1985 Jakopovich Daniel The Concept of Class Cambridge Studies in Social Research No 14 Social Science Research Group University of Cambridge 2014 Jens Hoff The Concept of Class and Public Employees Acta Sociologica vol 28 no 3 July 1985 pp 207 26 Mahalingam Ramaswami Essentialism Culture and Power Representations of Social Class Journal of Social Issues Vol 59 2003 pp 733 on India Mahony Pat amp Zmroczek Christine Class Matters Working Class Women s Perspectives on Social Class Taylor amp Francis 1997 Manza Jeff amp Brooks Clem Social Cleavages and Political Change Voter Alignments and U S Party Coalitions Oxford University Press 1999 Manza Jeff Political Sociological Models of the U S New Deal Annual Review of Sociology 2000 pp 297 Manza Jeff Hout Michael Clem Brooks 1995 Class Voting in Capitalist Democracies since World War II Dealignment Realignment or Trendless Fluctuation Annual Review of Sociology 21 137 62 doi 10 1146 annurev soc 21 1 137 Marmot Michael The Status Syndrome How Social Standing Affects Our Health and Longevity 2004 Marx Karl amp Engels Frederick The Communist Manifesto 1848 The key statement of class conflict as the driver of historical change Merriman John M Consciousness and Class Experience in Nineteenth Century Europe Holmes amp Meier Publishers 1979 Ostrander Susan A Women of the Upper Class Temple University Press 1984 Owensby Brian P Intimate Ironies Modernity and the Making of Middle Class Lives in Brazil Stanford University 1999 Pakulski Jan amp Waters Malcolm The Death of Class Sage 1996 rejection of the relevance of class for modern societies Payne Geoff The Social Mobility of Women Beyond Male Mobility Models 1990 Savage Mike Class Analysis and Social Transformation London Open University Press 2000 Stahl Garth Identity Neoliberalism and Aspiration Educating White Working Class Boys London Routledge 2015 Sennett Richard amp Cobb Jonathan The Hidden Injuries of Class Vintage 1972 classic study of the subjective experience of class Siegelbaum Lewis H amp Suny Ronald eds Making Workers Soviet Power Class and Identity Cornell University Press 1994 Russia 1870 1940 Wlkowitz Daniel J Working with Class Social Workers and the Politics of Middle Class Identity University of North Carolina Press 1999 Weber Max Class Status and Party in e g Gerth Hans and C Wright Mills From Max Weber Essays in Sociology Oxford University Press 1958 Weber s key statement of the multiple nature of stratification Weinburg Mark The Social Analysis of Three Early 19th century French liberals Say Comte and Dunoyer Journal of Libertarian Studies Vol 2 No 1 pp 45 63 1978 Wood Ellen Meiksins The Retreat from Class A New True Socialism Schocken Books 1986 ISBN 0 8052 7280 1 and Verso Classics January 1999 reprint with new introduction ISBN 1 85984 270 4 Wood Ellen Meiksins Labor the State and Class Struggle Monthly Review Vol 49 No 3 1997 Wouters Cas The Integration of Social Classes Journal of Social History Volume 29 Issue 1 1995 pp 107 on social manners Wright Erik Olin The Debate on Classes Verso 1990 neo Marxist Wright Erik Olin Class Counts Comparative Studies in Class Analysis Cambridge University Press 1997 Wright Erik Olin ed Approaches to Class Analysis 2005 scholarly articles Zmroczek Christine amp Mahony Pat Eds Women and Social Class International Feminist Perspectives London UCL Press 1999 The lower your social class the wiser you are suggests new study Science 20 December 2017 External links Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Social class Media related to Social class at Wikimedia Commons Domhoff G William The Class Domination Theory of Power University of California Santa Cruz Graphic How Class Works New York Times 2005 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