no. even in america the working-class can be analysed through solid economic analysis and structural evaluation as accounting for 40% base of the population. in popular perception (or rather, misperception), almost everyone wants to term themselves middle-class. you have an aversion, or a self-loathing majority, who will not readily admit they are working-class. i just proposed that this is linked to the ideology of individualism and 'be all you can be' type american dreaming. perhaps that's piffle. perhaps i'm over-extending. i'm readily willing to admit that the link could be tenuous. however what is evident is that a large group of americans are probably self-deluding about their class and status. a few minor material trinkets/distractions and they think they're out of hoi polloi and into the comfy bourgeoisie. it's a class anxiety that pushes everyone towards this safe middle, even though it doesn't correspond to the obvious - and necessary - economic reality.Macbeth wrote:
Okay for the second time: things are measured differently and mean different things in different places. Americans have a pretty wide range of what the American middle class means and symbolizes. This isn't some U.K. is better than America thing. It just means our measurement, terms, and symbols are different.
it's not about different definitions really, at all. the academics you linked to are neatly in line with classical definitions, in fact. it's the fact the terms have become misnomers in popular thought and public perception. again. please go to some revision because i am not passing you on this module.