Friday, 4 November 2016

Social class summary

Social Class



The groups into which people are divided as a result of socio-economic inequality. People in class strata share a similar economic situation such as occupation, income and ownership of wealth.


The divisions between the social classes however are quite vague e.g. where the working class end and the middle class begin.


Class is also closely related to status and lifestyle.


The social class system is regarded as MERITOCRATIC. i.e. where social position is achieved by merit rather than ASCRIBED by birth. However the social class you are born into can have an impact on life chance and therefore movement into a higher class group is minimised. The upper classes in the UK achieve their position via inherited wealth, thus the majority of citizens could never hope to achieve upper class status.



 


Upper Class


Inherited wealth, ascribed status. Owners of the ‘means of production’ e.g. landowners, titled gentry, aristocracy etc.


Middle Class




Those in skilled non-manual and professional occupations (white collar workers). Middle class may be ascribed or achieved.


Working Class




Manual occupations, both skilled and unskilled.


Under Class




Excluded groups, usually due to poverty and lack of employment. Often presented by the media as deviant – addicts/spongers etc.


Looking at media representation of class is concerned with how different social groups are portrayed, the stereotypes used and the value messages communicated.
We are surrounded by images of class on TV, in film, and in print. These often perpetuate stereotypes which fuel prejudice.
Upper Class
The lives of royalty and the jet setting lifestyle of the rich are portrayed as a glamorous world we can only dream about e.g. Represented in the likes of Hello/Tatler etc. This image is contrasted by the use of the upper classes as a source of comedy, the working / middle classes poking fun at their lifestyle, the champagne swigging/polo playing set, the butt of many a joke e.g; They Think It’s all Over. This is often used to set this class apart, as most of us will never enter into this world, therefore ridicule overrides aspiration.
Middle Class
Images of the comfortable, white, middle class nuclear family is one of the most common images in the media e.g. advertising, sit com such as My Family. By accumulation we therefore associate this with the ‘norm’.
Middle class deviance e.g. racism, crimes such as insider share dealing/tax evasion is often ignored or presented in less hostile terms than working class crime.
Working Class
There are many mixed messages about working class life and sub-cultures. On the one hand many ads give a solid, romanticised view, often equated with the North e.g. Hovis/Warburtons/Boddingtons. Characters tend to be associated with qualities we admire e.g. ‘the jack the lad’, the straight talking, quick witted woman etc. On the other hand the working class can be portrayed as course, prone to violence and crime and party to all manner of social problems.
Underclass
The media tend to reinforce the popular prejudice that the poor are work-shy spongers living off the Government, some successful products have used this successfully e.g The Royle family. These stereotypes have a long history extending back to the Victorian era, where novels and images represented the underclass as a danger to society and its moral fibre

A really good clip on class