Class, Self, CulturePsychology Press, 2004 - 226 pagina's Class, Self, Culture puts class back on the map in a novel way by taking a new look at how class is made and given value through culture. It shows how different classes become attributed with value, enabling culture to be deployed as a resource and as a form of property, which has both use-value to the person and exchange-value in systems of symbolic and economic exchange. The book shows how class has not disappeared, but is known and spoken in a myriad of different ways, always working through other categorisations of nation, race, gender and sexuality and across different sites: through popular culture, political rhetoric and academic theory. In particular attention is given to how new forms of personhood are being generated through mechanisms of giving value to culture, and how what we come to know and assume to be a 'self' is always a classed formation. Analysing four processes: of inscription, institutionalisation, perspective-taking and exchange relationships, it challenges recent debates on reflexivity, risk, rational-action theory, individualisation and mobility, by showing how these are all reliant on fixing some people in place so that others can move. |
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academic Adkins aesthetic aestheticization analysis Andrew Sayer appropriation argues assets attributed authentic authority become body Bourdieu bourgeois central chapter claims class formation class struggle classification commodity concept constitutive contemporary cosmopolitan critique cultural capital cultural property cultural resources debates defined demonstrates discourse dispositions economic enables entitlement Essex girl exchange exchange-value exclusion exploitation explores femininity feminism fetishism forms Gay Village gender Giddens global groups hen parties historical homo sacer identified identity identity politics inequality inscription instance institutionalized interests knowledge labour legitimate lesbian Lury Marxist middle-class mis-recognition mobility moral object omnivorousness particular person personhood perspective political rhetoric Poovey position possessive individual potential practices produced race reflexivity relations relationships representations reproduced ressentiment rhetoric Royle Family seen self-ownership sexuality shows significant Skeggs social space Strathern structure struggle subject of value symbolic taste theorists theory use-value whilst white working-class working-class women Zizek