![]() |
![]() |
Your cart is empty |
||
Showing 1 - 2 of 2 matches in All Departments
In When Did We All Become Middle Class?, Martin Nunlee discusses how a lack of class identity gives people a false sense of their relationship to power, which has made the US population accept the myth that they live in a meritocracy. This book examines social class within the framework of psychological tendencies, everyday interactions, institutions and pervasive cultural ideas to show how Americans have shifted from general concerns of social and economic equality to fragmented interests groups. Written in a conversational style, this book is a useful tool for undergraduate courses covering social class, such as inequality, stratification, poverty, and social problems.
In When Did We All Become Middle Class?, Martin Nunlee discusses how a lack of class identity gives people a false sense of their relationship to power, which has made the US population accept the myth that they live in a meritocracy. This book examines social class within the framework of psychological tendencies, everyday interactions, institutions and pervasive cultural ideas to show how Americans have shifted from general concerns of social and economic equality to fragmented interests groups. Written in a conversational style, this book is a useful tool for undergraduate courses covering social class, such as inequality, stratification, poverty, and social problems.
|
![]() ![]() You may like...
Religion and Biopolitics
Mirjam Weiberg-Salzmann, Ulrich Willems
Hardcover
R2,926
Discovery Miles 29 260
Constructing Narratives for City…
Alistair Cole, Aisling Healy, …
Hardcover
R2,837
Discovery Miles 28 370
Reporting Public Opinion - How the Media…
Erik Gahner Larsen, Zoltan Fazekas
Hardcover
R3,587
Discovery Miles 35 870
|