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The Relationship of Identity to Social Class

A social class is a group of people who share a similar economic situation, such as occupational level, income and wealth. There are four main social classes in society: upper class, middle class, working class, and underclass.

Social stratification

Social stratification

  • Stratification describes the dividing of a society into strata (layers) by factors like gender, social class, ethnicity etc.
  • Lots of societies nowadays mainly stratify by social class, including the UK and other Western capitalist societies.
Occupation

Occupation

  • People’s occupation is an important marker of social class and is often central to how people see themselves (their individual identity) and how other people define them (their social identity).
  • Marxists see social class as a key marker of social identity.
__Bourdieu__: Class habitus

Bourdieu: Class habitus

  • Bourdieu argues that each social class has its own cultural framework (a set of ideas or ‘habitus') which people learn during primary and secondary socialisation.
  • Habitus includes the way people use language and their accent, attitudes and culture tastes (including diet choices, leisure activities, clothing, and fashion).
'Cultural capital’

'Cultural capital’

  • According to Bourdieu, those with access to the habitus of the dominant class possess ‘cultural capital’.
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Theory & Methods

2

Education with Methods in Context

3

Option 1: Culture & Identity

4

Option 1: Families & Households

5

Option 1: Health

6

Option 1: Work, Poverty & Welfare

7

Option 2: Beliefs in Society

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Option 2: Global Development

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Option 2: The Media

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Crime & Deviance

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