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The Working Class

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Features of Proletarian Traditionalism. Belief in collectivism not individualism. Living for the moment unable to defer gratification. Fatalism (attitude to life) – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Working Class


1
The Working Class
  • www.educationforum.co.uk

2
Life Chances and Culture
  • Low wages, less job security, harsher conditions,
    less autonomy, poorer life chances, lower life
    expectancy.
  • Some sociologists e.g. Lockwood suggest that such
    an experience creates a distinctive working class
    sub culture (norms values) in opposition to
    societal norms and values
  • Lockwood called this sub culture proletarian
    traditionalism

3
Features of Proletarian Traditionalism
  • Belief in collectivism not individualism
  • Living for the moment unable to defer
    gratification
  • Fatalism (attitude to life)
  • Class loyalty and strong trade union
    identification see class and politics as them
    and us
  • Collective leisure activities work and leisure
    very distinct
  • Patriarchical family structures segregated
    conjugal roles male head of household
  • A sub culture in direct opposition to middle
    class aspirational individualism

4
What has happened to the Working class in the
last 40 years?
  • Global economic change has seen western countries
    deindustrilaise loss of primary and secondary
    industries loss of traditional working class
    jobs
  • 45 decrease in manual jobs
  • 45 increase in service sector jobs
  • Traditional working class under threat some
    have fallen off the hierarchy altogether and
    become underclass others have moved into the
    service sector and achieved some social mobility

5
Embourgeiosement
  • Put forward by Right wing theorists in the 1950s
    as an explanation for changes in working class
    Zweig, Kerr, Bernard
  • Claimed that the new workers in service sector
    were actually bourgeois middle class in
    values and attitudeds as well as income
  • Britain was becoming a nations of aspirational
    individualists collectivist and socialist ideas
    were either dying or dead

6
Affluent Worker Thesis
  • Two Weberians Goldthorpe and Lockwood attempted
    to test the embourgeiosement theory in a study of
    semi skilled workers in Luton in the 1960s
  • They concluded
  • New workers had higher wages than traditional
    working class
  • Still had inferior conditions and market
    situation compared to middle class
  • Were less likely to identify with trade unions
    but still had a collectivist attitude
  • Their collectivism was instrumental rather than
    solidaristic they believed in taking collective
    action to improve their pay and conditions rather
    than out of belief or principle
  • Affluent workers leisure had become privatised
    and home centred
  • They still voted labour but instrumentally rather
    than out of principled commitment
  • Godthorpe and Lockwood claimed there was a new
    privatised and instrumentalist working class in
    the stratification system located between the
    traditional working class and the middle class

7
More Recent Studies
  • Devine returned to Luton in the 1990s to examine
    what had happened to the affluent workers
  • Reached similar conclusions to Goldthorpe and
    Lockwood but noted that some of these affluent
    workers were now voting Conservative

8
Theoretical Perspectives on Working Class Marxism
  • Early Marxism predicted an increasingly conscious
    working class. Workers immiserised by the
    profit system longer hours, harsher conditions,
    low pay would eventually force the working class
    to wake up to or become conscious of their
    position within capitalism
  • They would start with violence and protest but
    eventually become aware of the need to be
    political active and revolutionary
  • Objective class consciousness would result in a
    Revolution to abolish capitalism and replace it
    with communism

9
Weberians (Goldthorpe and Lockwood)
  • Divisions within working class limits the nature
    and extent of class consciousness
  • Affluent worker studies show traditional working
    class values either in decline or changing
  • Working class as a whole is divided and
    disempowered

10
Neo Marxist (Gramsci, Althusser, Blackburn and
Mann
  • Working class still exploited and capable of
    flashes of consciousness BUT shows
    inconsistencies and contradictions in their views
    because of the ideological power of the
    bourgeoisie.
  • Mass media, religion, education combine to
    confuse and undermine class consciousness
  • Severe exploitation has been exported to
    developing countries by global capitalism
    working class is globally divided

11
The Underclass
  • New Right theorists produced a cultural theory to
    explain the phenomenon of the underclass
  • Charles Murray the underclass is defined by
    its own behaviours and choices
  • Never employed and doesnt want to work
  • Dependent on benefits undermines functionality of
    stratification system by getting something for
    nothing
  • Criminal and deviant
  • Rejects societies values/norms
  • Dysfunctional socialises new generation into
    its own values
  • Single parent and highly dysfunctional households
  • The NR see the solution to the underclass to be
    reducing benefits, making work pay reducing the
    role of the State to reduce dependency

12
Criticisms
  • Structuralists like Marxists point out the
    structural causes of poverty and unemployment
    lack of jobs not personal choice
  • Giddens identifies the economic causes of the
    underclass in the growth of a secondary labour
    market of low skill, temp, short term ,casual,
    zero hours employment employers use immigrants,
    women and illegal's because they are cheaper and
    more easily exploited
  • Marxists call the Underclass the
    lumpenproletariat and claim it is functional
    for capitalism. A reserve army of workers can be
    called on at any time to break strikes or drive
    down wages
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