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The United States thinks of itself as a "middle-class
country," but nobody -- not sociologists, economists,
or the U.S. Census Bureau --have a precise definition what
it means to be middle class. And where is the dividing
line between "working class" and "middle class?"
Still, an enormous number of people define themselves
as "middle class." According to statistics from the
National Opinion Research Center large numbers of American
define themselves as "working class" or "middle
class," including:
- 50% of those families who earn
between $20,000 and $40,000 annually
- 38% of those families who earn between
$40,000 and $60,000 annually
- 16.8% of those families who earn
over $110,000 annually
In searching for resources on the middle-class experience,
we found very little that was useful about middle class
culture and class identity. There is a lot, however,
about the squeezed, shrinking, endangered, and threatened
middle class.
Debunking Common Myths about the Middle Class . See
the ten factors that have changed the financial stability of today's middle
class, courtesy of Elizabeth Warren and Amelia Warren Tyagi,
from their book The Two Income Trap: Why Middle-Class
Mothers and Fathers are Going Broke (Basic Books,
2003).
LINKS
"What is Middle Class?" Interesting article with interviews
about confusion over who is "middle class." Chris
Baker, Washington Times, Nov. 30, 2003.
www.classmatters.org
Class Matters . Betsy
Leondar-Wright's forthcoming book is Class Matters: Cross-Class Alliance
Building for Middle Class Activists . This website
contains interviews with poor and working class leaders
about the challenges of cross-class organizing and information
collected in the course of writing the book.
Documentary: "Middle Class Squeeze." PBS's NOW program
with Bill Moyers did a special report on the middle class
experience. Read background
materials and transcripts.
www.themiddleclass.org/main.cfm
Drum Major Institute for Public Policy created Themiddleclass.org
to serve as an online headquarters for information about
today's squeezed middle class. It's a toolkit for those
who make, influence, and monitor public policy on the state
of the middle class and the policies that could impact
their lives.
"Middle-Class
Squeeze" Web Site. Congressman
George Miller maintains a web site on the "Middle Class
Squeeze." The site looks at the stagnating or declining
real wages for workers, exploding health care and college
costs, and record-high gas prices--among other challenges--that
are damaging most Americans' way of life.
BOOKS
Brantlinger, Ellen A. Dividing Classes: How the Middle
Class Negotiates and Justifies School Advantage.
London, U.K.: Falmer Press, 2003.
Cose, Ellis. The Rage of a Privileged Class: Why Do
Prosperous Blacks Still Have the Blues? Perennial,
1995. A controversial and widely heralded look at the
race-related pain and anger felt by the most respected,
best educated, and wealthiest members of the black community.
Ehrenreich, Barbara. Fear of Falling: The Inner Life
of the Middle Class. New York: Harper Collins,
1989
Feagin, Joe. R. and Sikes, Melvin P. Living
With Racism: The Black Middle-Class Experience. Boston:
Beacon Press, 1994. Pervasive white racism--often subtle
and covert, at times blatant--is a daily reality for
African Americans, according to the 209 middle-class
blacks interviewed for this important and disturbing
report.
Howe. Carolyn. Political Ideology and Class Formation:
A Study of the Middle Class. Praeger Press,
1992. Five theories of the middle class are systematically
examined: new class, new working class, new petit bourgeoisie,
new labor aristocracy, and contradictory class locations.
Using these five theories, the author offers an accessible
analysis of recent debates within class analysis and
stratification studies
Kenny, Lorraine Delia. Daughters of Suburbia: Growing
Up White, Middle Class, and Female. Rutgers
University Press, 2001.
Leondar-Wright, Betsy. Class Matters: Cross-Class
Alliance Building for Middle Class Activists. Gabriola
Island, British Columbia: New Society Publishers, 2005. A practical guide by Class
Action board member, Betsy Leondar-Wright, that draws
on interviews and movement lessons about building healthy
cross-class organizing efforts.
Excerpts from Class Matters...
A Conversation with Betsy Leondar-Wright...
Mills, C. Wright, Jacoby, Russell. White Collar:
The American Middle Classes. Oxford University
Press; 2002 (50th Annv edition).
In print for fifty years, White Collar is considered
a standard on the subject of the new middle class in twentieth-century
America. This landmark volume demonstrates how the conditions
and styles of middle class life--originating from elements
of both the newer lower and upper classes--represent modern
society as a whole.
Moskowitz, Marina. Standard of Living: The Measure
of the Middle Class in Modern America. Baltimore:
John Hopkins Press, 2004.
Mary Pattillo-McCoy, Mary. Black Picket Fences: Privilege
and Peril among the Black Middle Class. University
of Chicago, 2000. A close-up look at the black
middle class Chicago neighborhood of Groveland and the
advantages and challenges facing the community.
Parker, Richard. Myth of the Middle Class. New
York: HarperCollins, 1972.
Phillips, Kevin. Boiling Point: Democrats, Republicans
and the Decline of Middle-Class Prosperity. New
York: Random House, 1993.
Sullivan, Teresa A., Warren, Elizabeth and Westbrook,
Jay Lawrence. The Fragile Middle Class: Americans
in Debt. New Haven: Yale University Press, 2000.
Warren, Elizabeth and Tyagi, Amelia Warren. The Two-Income
Trap: Why Middle-Class Mothers and Fathers are Going
Broke. Basic Books, 2003.
Shop at Powells online bookstore for the above books or view our staff picks and more! When you shop through this link, you are supporting Class Action directly.
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