1 / 12

Re-materialising social class.

Re-materialising social class. Nick J Fox. @ socnewmat. Introduction. Sociology and social divisions. The turn to matter in social theory. Three criticisms of the sociology of class. A materialist perspective on social divisions. The micropolitics of class (re)production.

byrd
Download Presentation

Re-materialising social class.

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Re-materialising social class. Nick J Fox @socnewmat

  2. Introduction • Sociology and social divisions. • The turn to matter in social theory. • Three criticisms of the sociology of class. • A materialist perspective on social divisions. • The micropolitics of class (re)production. • ‘Learning to Labour’ revisited. • Conclusions.

  3. Sociology, social divisions and social inequalities • Neo-Marxist analysis of class. • Neo-Weberian analysis of class. • Bourdieu and class ‘distinctions’. • Recent analysis of social class – the Great British Class Survey (Savage et al., 2013).

  4. The ‘new’ materialisms • Beyond historical materialism. • Materiality is plural, complex, relational and emergent. • Cuts across nature/culture dualism. • Not structures/systems/mechanisms but a micropolitics of events. • From human agency to material ‘affects’. • Research focus on assemblages, affects and capacities.

  5. The sociology of class: 3 criticisms • Theories of class downplay material forces and the role of the non-human. • Contemporary theories of class are essentialist and individualist rather than relational; • Sociological classifications artificially aggregate dissimilar bodies.

  6. A materialist perspective on social divisions • The relationality of social divisions. • A micropolitical focus on the events that produce social division and inequality. • From ‘symbolic capital’ to a concern with human and non-human matter.

  7. Example: academics and class • Academic class position is relational, produced by interactions with a range of non-human relations, including: salary/pension; work spaces/physical environment; libraries/literature; office furniture; ICT resources; airplanes/ hotels/conferences; housing; vehicles; consumer goods; university environment

  8. ‘Learning to Labour’ re-visited • Willis (1977): ‘how working class kids get working-class jobs’. • Culture clash between academic and ‘working-class’ values. • Working class school-resisters (‘the lads’) progressively shifted to non-academic classes (sport, manual crafts). • This led to them leaving school without qualifications and to tejm consequently taking manual jobs. • This, for Willis, is how class is reproduced across generations. • Critique: this series of events was based on a small sub-sample in his study. In fact, many working class children do succeed academically .

  9. A micropolitics of class reproduction 1 • Analyse the range of materialities in the working-class environment: • human bodies (workers, school students, teachers, career advisors, employers, managers, family, friends and acquaintances etc.); • collective organizations and institutions; • physical spaces and structures; • tools, equipment and other material goods within these spaces; • the raw materials of production (iron and steel, wood, agricultural products etc); • products of work (goods, services, knowledge); • money and wages, and the goods these can purchase. • These interact in highly complex ways (see next slide).

  10. A micropolitics of class reproduction 2 • These relations were assembled by a range of affective movements, including: • school’s orientation towards academic achievements; • an affect-economy that linked families, jobs, money and employers; • material activities/events (music, sport, sex, drinking alcohol, crime); • struggles between teachers and students for authority and control; • the needs of employers for appropriately-skilled workers. •  This complex affect-economy produced a wide range of capacities in children.

  11. The complexity of social divisions • Some affects are powerfully aggregating, drawing together dissimilar individuals in terms of the capacities they generated. • However Willis documented some cases where affects countered these aggregations, to produce unexpected outcomes. • These affects fracture these aggregations, producing a range of capacities that open up possibilities for young people.

  12. Discussion and conclusions • Micropolitical analysis reveals how schools produce capacities and incapacities in school students and future workers. • Capacities are emergent and context-specific, not fixed attributes of a body or reservoirs of social, cultural and other symbolic ‘capitals’. • To understand the breadth of relations and affects that influence social mobility and produce social divisions, we need detailed data on the complex affect-economies in schools, workplaces, households and wider communities. • Sociological study of social divisions and inequalities needs to move decisively away from efforts to generate classifications. • We need to acknowledge the complex affects of non-human matter on bodies.

More Related