Pt. I. Habits and manners. Goodbye to the marketplace : food and exclusivity in nineteenth-century New York / Anne Mendelson -- "Natural distinction" : the American bourgeois search for distinctive ...
I have two degrees, two books to my name and I write for the Guardian. Yet I spent time in care, live at home and struggle for money. Can Karl Marx help me make sense of myself? I have been obsessed ...
In the mid-nineteenth century the bourgeoisie were apparent everywhere. You met them in theatres and restaurants, in churches and clubs, on beaches and river boats, in woods and parks, often walking ...
This is the report delivered by Eduardo Parati, an IYSSE member in Brazil, to the 2023 International May Day Online Rally. To view all speeches, visit wsws.org/mayday ...
PEOPLE love to mock the middle class. Its narrow-mindedness, complacency and conformism are the mother lode of material for sitcom writers and novelists. But Marx thought “the bourgeoisie…has played a ...
The argument that forms of organization must be adapted to the respective era of development is very often countered by the seemingly logical and common saying: Revolution is not a “question of ...
Law professors Amy Wax and Larry Alexander wrote an op-ed for the Philadelphia Inquirer that made a commonsense argument: that many of our social problems today stem from a collapse of middle-class ...
The most important conditions of life and essential characteristics of contemporary art are determined by the existing class relationship. They can therefore only be abolished through revolution and ...
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