Condividi
Fr. 31.90
Paul Fussel, P. Fussell, Paul Fussell
Class
Inglese · Tascabile
Spedizione di solito entro 2 a 3 settimane (il titolo viene stampato sull'ordine)
Descrizione
Alison Lurie The New York Times Book Review A shrewd and entertaining commentary on American mores today. Frighteningly acute. Informationen zum Autor Paul Fussell, critic, essayist, and cultural commentator, has recently won the H. L. Mencken Award of the Free Press Association. Among his books are The Great War and Modem Memory, which in 1976 won both the National Book Critics Circle Award and the National Book Award; Abroad: British Literary Traveling Between the Wars; Wartime: Understanding and Behavior in the Second World War; and, most recently, BAD or, The Dumbing of America. His essays have been collected in The Boy Scout Handbook and Other Observations and Thank God for the Atom Bomb and Other Essays. He lives in Philadelphia, where he teaches English at the University of Pennsylvania. Klappentext In his highly entertaining observations of class in America, Fussell shows how our status is revealed by everything we do, say, and own. Funny, insightful, and at times outrageous, Class is guaranteed to amuse everyone, from high-class to low. Line drawings throughout. Chapter 1 A Touchy Subject Although most Americans sense that they live within an extremely complicated system of social classes and suspect that much of what is thought and done here is prompted by considerations of status, the subject has remained murky. And always touchy. You can outrage people today simply by mentioning social class, very much the way, sipping tea among the aspidistras a century ago, you could silence a party by adverting too openly to sex. When, recently, asked what I am writing, I have answered, "A book about social class in America," people tend first to straighten their ties and sneak a glance at their cuffs to see how far fraying has advanced there. Then, a few minutes later, they silently get up and walk away. It is not just that I am feared as a class spy. It is as if I had said, "I am working on a book urging the beating to death of baby whales using the dead bodies of baby seals." Since I have been writing this book I have experienced many times the awful truth of R. H. Tawney´s perception, in his book Equality (1931): "The word ´class´ is fraught with unpleasing associations, so that to linger upon it is apt to be interpreted as the symptom of a perverted mind and a jaundiced spirit." Especially in America, where the idea of class is notably embarrassing. In his book Inequality in an Age of Decline (1980), the sociologist Paul Blumberg goes so far as to call it "America´s forbidden thought." Indeed, people often blow their tops if the subject is even broached. One woman, asked by a couple of interviewers if she thought there were social classes in this country, answered: "It´s the dirtiest thing I´ve ever heard of!" And a man, asked the same question, got so angry that he blurted out, "Social class should be exterminated!" Actually, you reveal a great deal about your social class by the amount of annoyance or fury you feel when the subject is brought up. A tendency to get very anxious suggests that you are middle-class and nervous about slipping down a rung or two. On the other hand, upper-class people love the topic to come up: the more attention paid to the matter the better off they seem to be. Proletarians generally don´t mind discussions of the subject because they know they can do little to alter their class identity. Thus the whole class matter is likely to seem like a joke to them -- the upper classes fatuous in their empty aristocratic pretentiousness, the middles loathsome in their anxious gentility. It is the middle class that is highly class-sensitive, and sometimes class-scared to death. A representative of that class left his mark on a library copy of Russell Lynes´s The Tastemakers (1954). Next to a passage patronizing the insecure decorating taste of the middle class and satirically contrast...
Dettagli sul prodotto
Autori | Paul Fussel, P. Fussell, Paul Fussell |
Editore | Simon & Schuster USA |
Lingue | Inglese |
Formato | Tascabile |
Pubblicazione | 01.10.1992 |
EAN | 9780671792251 |
ISBN | 978-0-671-79225-1 |
Dimensioni | 140 mm x 215 mm x 13 mm |
Categorie |
Scienze naturali, medicina, informatica, tecnica
> Scienze naturali, tematiche generali
Scienze sociali, diritto, economia > Sociologia > Teorie sociologiche |
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