PART I: INTRODUCTION: BEGINNING THE WORK OF CLASS AND CULTURE
1. Class-work: Social Change and Class Critique after the 1980s
2. Class-work after 'the Death of Class'
3. Class and Contemporary British Culture: Outline
PART II: ESSEX: CLASS, ASPIRATION AND SOCIAL MOBILITY
1. Essex, Conservatism and 'the New Sociology of Aspirations'
2. The Discovery of Essex Man
3. I've got loadsamoney!
4. Class, Taste and the Essex Girl
PART III: THE REVOLTING 'UNDERCLASS': 'YOU KNOW THEM WHEN YOU SEE
THEM'
1. The 2011 English Riots and the 'Feral Underclass'
2. The 1980s: 'The Underclass, so Long Prophesied, is Now
Emerging'
3. The 1990s: from the 'Underclass' to the Socially Excluded
4. The 'Underclass' Returns: Lifestyle, Consumerism,
Precariousness
PART IV: TOP OF THE CLASS: EDUCATION, CAPITAL AND CHOICE
1. Inspiring the Uninspired
2. Sharp Elbows and the Competition for Resources
3. The Choice-directive or Choosing to Choose
4. The Parent-citizen and the Deployment of Capital
5. More Dream Schools
6. Poor Choices
PART V: THE ONES WHO GOT AWAY: CELEBRITY LIFE STORIES OF UPWARD
SOCIAL MOBILITY
1. Celebrity Biography: Production and Consumption
2. Celebrities Working to Keep it Real
3. I Dreamed a Dream: Celebrity Origins
4. 'How did I get here from there?': Celebrity Endings
PART VI: THE UPPER CLASSES: VISIBILITY, ADAPTABILITY AND CHANGE
1. The Business of Aristocracy
2. The Royal Family at Work
3. Upper Class Life-stylists: the Knowledge, the Gift and the
Rules
PART VII: 'ARE YOU THINKING WHAT WE'RE THINKING?' : CLASS,
IMMIGRATION AND BELONGING
1. Borders, Belonging and 'Saloon bar' Britons
2. Hylton-Potts and the Cabbies' Manifesto
3. The 'Good Woman' from Rochdale
4. All White in Barking
PART VIII: AUSTERITY BRITAIN: BACK TO THE FUTURE
1. In Times of Strife: the Myth of the 1970s Now
2. The Embattled Citizen: Keeping Calm and Carrying On
3. Past Times, Present Politics
4. 'The isle is full of noises': History Answers Back
Afterword: 'We are all in this together'
"Biressi and Nunn's brilliant analysis of the binding centrality of class in Britain is historically rich, intellectually astute, finely detailed and deeply knowledgeable. This book offers a vital, compelling analysis of why dissecting the cultural is necessary for understanding the social and, as such, it is essential reading for anyone studying the complex reinforcement of class relations in contemporary life." - Sally Munt, University of Sussex, UK "This richly evidenced, tightly argued and deeply self-reflexive book, while national in its initial focus, addresses a question of international importance: what happens to class in societies supposedly organised around market freedoms, but ever more unequal in their operations? Anita Biressi and Heather Nunn's answer, demonstrated in a series of brilliant analyses, is that class gets reshaped as a field of harsh cultural differentiation, hard-wired into a supposedly open and plural popular culture. If you care about the fate of society in neoliberal democracies such as Britain, you really must read this book. A wholly admirable piece of work." - Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK, and author of Why Voice Matters "Class and Contemporary British Culture makes for imperative reading. It's a superb book, one I'd highly recommend to anyone remotely interested in (what's horribly wrong with) contemporary Britain." - David Marx Book Reviews "This book examines a range of issues relating to British culture and class with chapters focusing on social mobility, the underclass, education, celebrity culture, the upper classes, immigration and austerity. The chapter on the 'revolting underclass' is one of the most concise, well written and researched overviews of the 'underclass' available in scholarly literature." - LSE Review "Class and Contemporary British Culture serves as an important indicator not just of how deeply engrained harmful class perceptions remain, but also of how far Britain needs to go before it can even pretend to call itself tolerant and democratic." - Elliot Murphy, Ceasefire "An intellectual tour de force boasting of a rare combination of theoretical rigour and page-turning clarity, it sets out to answer key questions about the appearance and reality of class in modern British life." - Michael Pierse, Irish Left Review 1.2, Autumn 2013 'This is a highly accessible book and would be ideal for students or readers with little knowledge of class discourses.' - Stefanie Williamson, The Sociological Review
Anita Biressi is Reader in Media Cultures at the University of
Roehampton, UK. Her research interests include news and tabloid
journalism, reality television, class and popular culture, gender
and political representation. She is the author of Crime, Fear and
the Law (2001) and co-author of Reality TV: Realism and Revelation
(2005).
Heather Nunn is Professor of Culture and Politics at the University
of Roehampton, UK. Her research interests include political
communication, formations of gender and class, documentary and
images of childhood. She is the author of Thatcher, Politics and
Fantasy (2002) and co-author of Reality TV: Realism and Revelation
(2005).
"Biressi and Nunn's brilliant analysis of the binding centrality of
class in Britain is historically rich, intellectually astute,
finely detailed and deeply knowledgeable. This book offers a vital,
compelling analysis of why dissecting the cultural is necessary for
understanding the social and, as such, it is essential reading for
anyone studying the complex reinforcement of class relations in
contemporary life." - Sally Munt, University of Sussex,
UK
"This richly evidenced, tightly argued and deeply self-reflexive
book, while national in its initial focus, addresses a question of
international importance: what happens to class in societies
supposedly organised around market freedoms, but ever more unequal
in their operations? Anita Biressi and Heather Nunn's answer,
demonstrated in a series of brilliant analyses, is that class gets
reshaped as a field of harsh cultural differentiation, hard-wired
into a supposedly open and plural popular culture. If you care
about the fate of society in neoliberal democracies such as
Britain, you really must read this book. A wholly admirable piece
of work." - Nick Couldry, Goldsmiths, University of London, UK, and
author of Why Voice Matters
"Class and Contemporary British Culture makes for imperative
reading. It's a superb book, one I'd highly recommend to anyone
remotely interested in (what's horribly wrong with) contemporary
Britain." - David Marx Book Reviews
"Thisbook examines a range of issues relating to British culture
and class with chapters focusing on social mobility, the
underclass, education, celebrity culture, the upper classes,
immigration and austerity. The chapter on the 'revolting
underclass' is one of the most concise, well written and researched
overviews of the 'underclass' available in scholarly literature." -
LSE Review
"Class and Contemporary British Culture serves as an important
indicator not just of how deeply engrained harmful class
perceptions remain, but also of how far Britain needs to go before
it can even pretend to call itself tolerant and democratic." -
Elliot Murphy, Ceasefire
"An intellectual tour de force boasting of a rare combination of
theoretical rigour and page-turning clarity, it sets out to answer
key questions about the appearance and reality of class in modern
British life." - Michael Pierse, Irish Left Review 1.2, Autumn
2013
'This is a highly accessible book and would be ideal for students
or readers with little knowledge of class discourses.' - Stefanie
Williamson, The Sociological Review
Ask a Question About this Product More... |