The Classless Society

Couverture
Stanford University Press, 2000 - 258 pages

Are there classes in America? In The Classless Society Paul Kingston forcefully answers no.

This book directly challenges a long-standing intellectual tradition of class analysis, recently revitalized by such prominent scholars as Erik Olin Wright and John Goldthorpe. Insisting on a realist conception of class, Kingston argues that presumed "classes" do not significantly share distinct, life-defining experiences.

Individual chapters assess the extent of class structuration in five dimensions of life: mobility (how demographically cohesive are classes?), interaction patterns (do classes exist as communal groups?), cultural orientation (are there class cultures, as Bourdieu and his followers maintain?), class sentiment (to what extent do objective position and subjective sentiments align?), and political orientations (do classes represent distinct political forces?). This broad assessment is the basis for Kingston's conclusion that classes do not exist in America in any meaningful way.

The Classless Society analyzes prominent general "maps" of the American class structure, as well as the less-studied extremes of socioeconomic position ("Lives of the Rich and Poor"), the alleged emergence of post-industrial classes (the "New Class" and the "McProletariat"), and class structuration in other societies ("American Unexceptionalism").

Kingston rigorously addresses the question, "How would you recognize a class if you saw one?" thus establishing clear grounds for engaging the issue. He relates the findings and methods of the best contemporary research in substantial detail, allowing the reader to assess the book's conclusions from a thorough evidentiary base.

À l'intérieur du livre

Table des matières

CHAPTER ONE Framing the Issue
1
CHAPTER TWO The Case for Realism
16
CHAPTER THREE Class Maps and Inequality
37
CHAPTER FOUR Mobility
60
CHAPTER FIVE Class Sentiment
87
CHAPTER SIX The Politics of Class
101
CHAPTER SEVEN Class Culture
119
Friends
149
CHAPTER NINE Lives of the Rich and Poor
159
CHAPTER TEN The Postindustrial Effect
179
CHAPTER TWELVE Beyond Class
209
Notes
237
References
243
Index
253
Droits d'auteur

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Expressions et termes fréquents

Fréquemment cités

Page 32 - Generally speaking, would you say that most people can be trusted or that you can't be too careful in dealing with people?
Page 178 - To understand what is happening to those at the bottom of American society, we need to examine their problems one at a time, asking how each has changed and what has caused the change. Instead of assuming that the problems are closely linked to one another, we need to treat their interrelationships as a matter for empirical investigation. When we do that, the relationships are seldom as strong as our class stereotypes would have led us to expect. As a result, some problems can become more common...
Page 87 - If you were asked to use one of four names for your social class, which would you say you belong in : the lower class, the working class, the middle class, or the upper class?
Page 88 - Thus for class consciousness there must be (1) a rational awareness and identification with one's own class interests/ (2) an awareness of and rejection of other class interests as illegitimate; and (3) an awareness of and a readiness to use collective political means to the collective political end of realizing one's political interests.
Page 50 - The backbone of the class structure, and indeed of the entire reward system of modern Western society, is the occupational order.
Page 48 - ... antagonistic interdependence of material interests of actors within economic relations, rather than the injustice of those relations as such. As I will use the term, class exploitation is defined by three principal criteria: A. The material welfare of one group of people causally depends on the material deprivations of another. B. The causal relation in (A) involves the asymmetrical exclusion of the exploited from access to certain productive resources.
Page 3 - realist versus nominalist" dispute over the kind of objective reality that should be ascribed to social classes has long been a standard theoretical and methodological issue in discussions of social stratification. Yet it has not always been acknowledged that all of the major nineteenth and twentieth-century theorists of class were unmistakably...
Page 187 - They are structurally quite undetermined, fluid particles on the way to something else, be it careers, unemployment or mothering. They are not a class, but people temporarily willing or forced to take unpleasant jobs
Page 88 - Economic potentiality becomes politically realized: 'a class in itself becomes a 'class for itself.' Thus for class consciousness there must be (1) a rational awareness and identification with one's own class interests; (2) an awareness of and rejection of other class interests as illegitimate; and...

À propos de l'auteur (2000)

Paul Kingston is Associate Professor of Sociology at the University of Virginia. He is the author, most recently, of The Sociology of Public Issues (with Steven Nock).

Informations bibliographiques