🎉 Up to 70% Off Selected ItemsShop Sale
HomeStore

Classes

Product image 1

Classes

Questions of class, power and distribution have reemerged as central concerns in the public discourse. When we talk about class, we don't always know what is meant. Is class about income or affect or the ownership of the means of production? Perhaps it is about authority or autonomy? But what happens when, as is often the case in complex advanced economies, people can occupy social and economic roles that seem to indicate membership in more than one class? And what does this mean for the supposed relationship between class and potential political capacity and affinity?

In Classes, Erik Olin Wright, the greatest American Marxist sociologists, rises to the twofold challenge of both clarifying the abstract, structural account of class implicit in Marx, and of applying and refining the account in the light of contemporary developments in advanced capitalist societies. What Wright calls "contradictory class locations" can make the class landscape appear much more complex than the simple model presented in Marx. Despite this complexity, common interests and therefore political alliances can still be found. In a society, like the US, characterized by extreme inequality, Classes provides not just a useful descriptive account of the operation of class but also the tools to understand the interplay of class interests and political (re)alignment.

$2.25

Original: $6.44

-65%
Classes

$6.44

$2.25

Product Information

Shipping & Returns

Description

Questions of class, power and distribution have reemerged as central concerns in the public discourse. When we talk about class, we don't always know what is meant. Is class about income or affect or the ownership of the means of production? Perhaps it is about authority or autonomy? But what happens when, as is often the case in complex advanced economies, people can occupy social and economic roles that seem to indicate membership in more than one class? And what does this mean for the supposed relationship between class and potential political capacity and affinity?

In Classes, Erik Olin Wright, the greatest American Marxist sociologists, rises to the twofold challenge of both clarifying the abstract, structural account of class implicit in Marx, and of applying and refining the account in the light of contemporary developments in advanced capitalist societies. What Wright calls "contradictory class locations" can make the class landscape appear much more complex than the simple model presented in Marx. Despite this complexity, common interests and therefore political alliances can still be found. In a society, like the US, characterized by extreme inequality, Classes provides not just a useful descriptive account of the operation of class but also the tools to understand the interplay of class interests and political (re)alignment.

You may also like

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Bean'S Gallipoli

$5.01

$1.75

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Beauty and the Beast

$3.58

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Beginning Theory

$4.29

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Behind a Velvet Light Trap

$10.73

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Buddhist Philosophy

$10.73

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Brick City

$5.01

$1.75

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Bully Beef and Biscuits: Food in the Great War

$12.88

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Brief Answers to the Big Questions

$5.01

$1.75

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Bring Back Cerberus: The Debt Instalment Three

$2.15

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Bosch

$6.44

-65%NEW
Thumbnail 1

Brett Whiteley Studio

$6.44

$2.25

NEW
Thumbnail 1

Bright Flowers

$5.72