There is social class in the US, but that book Class by Fussell basically struck me as astrology. He makes a huge number of testable predictions and doesn't bother to test a single one. I'm not sure why people put so much stock in it.
It's Fussell being humorous, at least in terms of style. His more serious books, "Wartime", and his famous essay "Thank God for the Atom Bomb", have little humor. Fussell was one of the ground troops already in the staging process for the land invasion of Japan, so he's entitled to an opinion on the atomic bombing.
This modernized review of the 1983 book isn't that helpful. That book is a period piece. A more modern book in this genre is "Nickeled and dimed" (1996). That's dated, too, but more recent.
- Top out of sight people are more visible than they used to be.
- Many "middle class" jobs have experienced a "class fall". Teachers, for example, have moved own from middle class to unionized high prole.
- There are fewer unionized high proles. In the 1950 to the 1970s, about a quarter of the US workforce was unionized, and those were the core of the high proles, with good job security, pay, and benefits. They're mostly gone.
- Near the bottom, we have the "precariat": gig workers and people who get laid off a lot.
- The bottom is now the homeless. US homelessness was rare until the 1980s; there were enough crap jobs to go around, and housing was less expensive as a fraction of income. There were more slums, and from the 1960s on, welfare was more generous. Also, drugs were less of a factor; alcohol was bigger.
"Upper-middle class teenagers go to college, and typically major in things with no obvious commercial application like English, art history, or computer science."
There is social class in the US, but that book Class by Fussell basically struck me as astrology. He makes a huge number of testable predictions and doesn't bother to test a single one. I'm not sure why people put so much stock in it.
I haven't read that one in a long time.
It's Fussell being humorous, at least in terms of style. His more serious books, "Wartime", and his famous essay "Thank God for the Atom Bomb", have little humor. Fussell was one of the ground troops already in the staging process for the land invasion of Japan, so he's entitled to an opinion on the atomic bombing.
This modernized review of the 1983 book isn't that helpful. That book is a period piece. A more modern book in this genre is "Nickeled and dimed" (1996). That's dated, too, but more recent.
- Top out of sight people are more visible than they used to be.
- Many "middle class" jobs have experienced a "class fall". Teachers, for example, have moved own from middle class to unionized high prole.
- There are fewer unionized high proles. In the 1950 to the 1970s, about a quarter of the US workforce was unionized, and those were the core of the high proles, with good job security, pay, and benefits. They're mostly gone.
- Near the bottom, we have the "precariat": gig workers and people who get laid off a lot.
- The bottom is now the homeless. US homelessness was rare until the 1980s; there were enough crap jobs to go around, and housing was less expensive as a fraction of income. There were more slums, and from the 1960s on, welfare was more generous. Also, drugs were less of a factor; alcohol was bigger.
Class calculator, from Pew: [1]
[1] https://www.pewresearch.org/short-reads/2024/09/16/are-you-i...
One of the best modern books on American class (or at least the upper class) is Troubled by Rob Henderson.
His concept of "luxury beliefs" explains a lot.
"Upper-middle class teenagers go to college, and typically major in things with no obvious commercial application like English, art history, or computer science."
Yeah does CS really have no commercial application? This whole thing feels like satire to me.
A classic if there ever was one, have read several times and will do again. After reading, I self-identify as high-prole.