The Moral Significance of Class
The Moral Significance of Class
The Moral Significance of Class
Cambridge, New York, Melbourne, Madrid, Cape Town, Singapore, So Paulo
Cambridge University Press
The Edinburgh Building, Cambridge , UK
Published in the United States of America by Cambridge University Press, New York
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Information on this title: www.cambridge.org/9780521850896
Andrew Sayer 2005
This book is in copyright. Subject to statutory exception and to the provision of
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without the written permission of Cambridge University Press.
First published in print format 2005
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Contents
page vii
1
22
52
70
95
139
169
187
213
Bibliography
Index
233
243
I was tempted to call this book Think Youre Better Than Us, Do You?,
as that challenge, real or imagined, gets to the heart of the moral significance of class in everyday life. Class is not a reflection of moral worth
or needs, and its relationship to merit is zero in childhood and more
cause than effect later. Yet since class fundamentally affects the kind and
quality of life we can lead its legitimacy is in question. This is what gives
class its moral significance, not simply as a matter for moral and political
philosophers to consider, but for our daily lived experience, in terms of
how people treat and value one another. For all the many books on class
in social science, remarkably few of them analyse the moral dimension
of class. This is because of the wider problem, particularly in sociology,
of what Axel Honneth terms anti-normativism, which renders opaque
the evaluative character of our relationship to the world. In particular
our concerns the things that matter to us for our well-being, the things
which we value and care about are either ignored or dealt with in an
alienated and alienating way which fails to identify why they matter so
much.
Although this book is very much about the moral texture of everyday,
lay, experience, I shall use concepts and analyses from philosophical literature on ethics much of it normative as well as sociology, to interpret
lay responses to class. This is an unusual combination indeed it is an
experiment but I hope to convince readers of its value primarily by
example. At the same time I shall use and refer to many concepts which
are simple and indeed familiar in everyday life, but my belief is that such is
their familiarity that they are taken for granted instead of analysed. When
we do examine them, we frequently find that they are rich in explanatory
resources and normative implications.
This book was completed with the support of an ESRC fellowship, and
sabbatical leave from Lancaster University.
Intellectually the book is most indebted first to the work of the late
Pierre Bourdieu, whose untimely death in 2002 lost social science an
outstanding theorist and its most perceptive analyst and enemy of class,
vii
viii
and secondly to that widely misunderstood figure of the Scottish Enlightenment, Adam Smith.
Closer to home, I would like to thank John ONeill for his generosity
and clarity in discussing philosophical matters. For suggestions, feedback
and generally provoking further thought, my thanks and appreciation
to Margaret Archer, Jo Armstrong, John Baker, Rosemary Crompton,
Norman Fairclough, Steve Fleetwood, Bob Jessop, Tony Lawson,
Kathleen Lynch, Maureen McNeil, Jamie Morgan, Diane Reay, Garrath
Williams, and Majid Yar, and likewise to Beverley Skeggs, Alan Warde,
Nick Crossley and the other members of the Manchester Sociology Bourdieu group. For supporting research and sanity in academic life, I would
like to thank Bob McKinlay, and Bob Jessop and my other sociology
colleagues at Lancaster. For making the department run smoothly and
happily, my thanks to Claire ODonnell, Karen Gammon, Cath Gorton,
Pennie Drinkall, and Joann Bowker. For musical sustenance I would particularly like to thank the VSBs, Richard Light, Gillian Welch and David
Rawlings, and the late, incomparable, Kathleen Ferrier. My love and
thanks to Eric Clark, Bridget Graham, Steve Fleetwood, Helle Fischer,
Costis Hadjimichalis, Frank Hansen, Richard Light, Kevin Morgan,
Caroline New, Wendy Olsen, John ONeill, Lizzie Sayer, Beverley Skeggs,
Dina Vaiou, Linda Woodhead and Karin Zotzmann for friendship and
support, and special thanks and good wishes to Abby Day. The book is
dedicated to my late mother, Mary Sayer, 29.9.191018.10.2003.
Introduction
Introduction
ideas are one of the main resources in enabling them to do this. Insofar
as our moral education, both formal and informal, encourages us to treat
others with respect and as of equal moral worth, we confront a society
in which people are manifestly not treated equally at the level either of
distribution of resources or of recognition. Thus, class differences, like
gender differences, conflict with moral principles and dispositions supporting equal recognition and respect. Of course, lay morality is itself
inconsistent and often supports unjustified inequalities, wrongly imagining them, as in the case of gender inequality, to be naturally based. But
scarcely anyone supposes that class differences have a natural basis.
There is a tension running throughout the book. It results from focusing on the moral significance of class while insisting on classs non-moral
determinants. But I shall argue that this tension is generated by the nature
of class itself and underpins popular unease and ambivalence about class.
Class lacks a moral justification, but people of different classes are likely
to feel obliged to justify their differences. This is problematic for them,
because of the huge influence of natal class and the mechanisms of class
reproduction and symbolic domination neither of which reflects moral
differences. They may seek to make sense of this either by ignoring these
mechanisms and imagining class differences to reflect differences in moral
worth or other kinds of merit, or by facing up to their own moral luck
and acknowledging the undeserved nature of their advantages or disadvantages. Often, actors appeal to a mixture of both kinds of argument,
and experience varying degrees of discomfort, embarrassment, resentment, shame and guilt about it, though some may feel proud of their
class position. Some may see themselves as equals rather than inferior or
superior, and want to be seen as such. Some may seek advantages over
others. Some may assertively demand respect while others may deferentially seek respectability. Many may attempt to distinguish themselves
from others through moral boundary drawing, claiming virtues for themselves and imputing vices to their others.
In their more reflective moments people may call upon and develop
folk sociologies to explain the behaviour and characteristics of others,
particularly the behaviour of members of other classes which they find
problematic. They may simply attribute it to class position, perhaps on
the basis of simple stereotyping, but they sometimes take into account
the effects of moral luck in terms of class position, so that they can judge
others either to have done well or badly because of their class advantages
or disadvantages, or well or badly despite them. While they may regard
class as an influence on behaviour they usually also want to say that people
have some responsibility for their behaviour and fortunes, so that class
disadvantages do not excuse anti-social behaviour. They may sometimes
Introduction
Lay normativity
[W]ithout a categorical opening to the normative standpoint from which subjects
themselves evaluate the social order, theory remains completely cut off from a
dimension of social discontent that it should always be able to call upon. (Axel
Honneth, 2003, p. 134)
The early founders of the social sciences combined positive and normative discourses
seamlessly (see ONeill, 1998; Barbalet, 2001).
See Manent, for a profound historical analysis of the development of this spectator view
of action in social science (Manent, 1998).
Similarly, Marx comments: The idea of one basis for life and another for science is from
the very outset a lie (Marx, 1975, p. 355).
Introduction
terms of how they correlate with social position. There is certainly some
interesting sociological research on this, for example, in the writings of
Pierre Bourdieu and Miche` le Lamont (Bourdieu, 1984; Lamont, 1992,
2000), but what matters to people is whether these different values are
defensible, and whether what they imply for well-being is true. There
may be specific worries such as how they should bring up their children
(Lareau, 2003; Reay, 1998b; Walkerdine and Lucey, 1989), concerns
about whether others are treating them fairly and respectfully (Skeggs,
1997), or reflections on the way their lives are going in terms of balancing
goods such as friendship and achievement (Archer, 2003).
Thus, if we are to understand lay normativity we need to go beyond
a sociological reductionism which deflates and demeans lay justifications
or rationales for beliefs and actions. Actors rationales may indeed sometimes be little more than rationalisations of their position: the economically successful would value achievement, wouldnt they?; and the poor
would say that other things than money are more important, wouldnt
they? But while we all are capable of rationalisation, we are also sometimes capable of taking different views from the ones that fit our position
most comfortably. Sociologists often do this themselves but are occupationally inclined to assume that those they study do not. I shall argue that
it is as important to acknowledge how far moral evaluations of self and
others are independent of class as it is to acknowledge how far they relate
and respond to class. Indeed, it is only in virtue of this dual nature of
lay moral judgements that we can understand why class is also a matter
of embarrassment, resentment and shame. This is not to say that people necessarily have particularly coherent normative ideas. They tend to
be disparate and sometimes inconsistent; middle class people may both
resent snobbery from those more highly placed and be snobbish towards
those below them. But however incoherent, the rationales are important
in themselves, and as actors ourselves, we can hardly avoid engaging with
them at least sometimes.
To be sure the rationales are to be found within available discourses,
but they are more than mere internalised and memorised bits of social
scripts. Discourses derive from and relate to a wider range of situations
than those directly experienced by the individuals who use them, thereby
allowing them vicarious access to the world beyond them. While they
constrain thought in certain ways, they are also open to different interpretations and uses, and endless innovation and deformation, and they
tend to contain inconsistencies and contradictions, making them open to
challenge from within. Although they structure perception they do not
necessarily prevent identification of false claims; for example, just because
someone believes that the social world is organised on a meritocratic
basis, it does not mean that no experience could ever lead them to have
doubts about this. Many of the discourses relating to inequalities are also
clearly normative, and normative discourse presupposes a discernible
difference between what ought to be and what is otherwise they would
be redundant. Thus, feminism has developed an enormously rich critique of gender orders, showing, in effect, how patriarchal assumptions
that legitimised and valued gender differences were ideological. In so
doing it has not merely provided an alternative set of values which we can
take or leave like individual preferences for colours, but has demonstrated
that assumptions about what was good about traditional roles of women
and men were mistaken, i.e., untrue, in that they had no natural basis and
caused suffering and limitation of capacities rather than flourishing or
well-being. As such it provides a compelling alternative moral discourse
with which actors can engage.
The main kind of normativity that I shall focus on, and the most important one for our well-being, is concerned with morality. By morality I
mean simply the matter of what kinds of behaviour are good, and thus
how we should treat others and be treated by them. Moral feelings, ideas
and norms about such things also imply and merge into what philosophers term conceptions of the good broader ideas or senses of how one
should live though in everyday life these are generally less coherent and
explicit than philosophers assume. I shall follow older senses of morality
and include these implicit conceptions as part of what moral concerns are
about. Some may prefer the term ethics to morality. Sometimes the
two terms are assumed to correspond to a distinction between informal,
embodied dispositions deriving from social life, perhaps from particular
communities, and formal norms and rules, though confusingly the referents of the two terms are sometimes reversed. I shall be referring mainly to
the informal embodied dispositions, but I shall use the adjectives moral
and ethical interchangeably.4
To treat morality simply as a set of norms and rules, backed up by
sanctions, which tend to produce social order, is to produce an alienated
4
Following Hegel, it is also common to distinguish moralitat, which identifies a universal conception of human needs or rationality against which existing social and political
arrangements can be assessed, and sittlichkeit, in which the good of individuals indeed,
their very identity and capacity for moral agency is bound up with the communities
they belong to, and the particular social and political roles they occupy (Kymlicka, 2002,
p. 209). Hegel argued that moralitat was too abstract to offer guidance and too individualistic, ignoring our embeddedness in communities. Of course, particular communal
ethics may make claims to universality, and, conversely, universal claims may become
part of a communitys ethos, as at least partially seems to be the case with liberal societies. Another form of the distinction often made by political philosophers, particularly
liberals, associates ethics with the good and morality with the right. This version of the
distinction is very fuzzy and not useful for my purposes.
Introduction
conception of the moral dimension of social life, for it omits what matters
to us and why morality should have any internal force. We dont treat
others in a certain way simply because there are norms dictating that we
should and because we fear sanctions if we dont. We also usually behave
in a certain way because we sense that it is right, regardless of whether
there are any penalties for not doing so, and because to do otherwise
would cause some sort of harm.
In view of the prevalence of alienated conceptions of morality in sociology, in which it is viewed as of minor importance and as an external
system of regulation of behaviour, and an inherently conservative and
reactionary one at that, it is perhaps necessary to remember how important it is to our very identities and well-being. I would ask any readers
who are accustomed to thinking of morality in this alienated way to pause
and think awhile about the following questions:
r What matters to you in life what do you care about?
r How do you feel you should be treated by others, and how do you feel
you should treat them? Why do you get upset if someone mistreats you?
And if you try to remonstrate and reason with them, how do you do
this and through what kinds of argument? Why shouldnt they treat you
like that?
r What kinds of behaviour would you feel ashamed of or guilty about and
why?
It would be strange to claim that these are unimportant matters or ones
that we could avoid, and there is nothing inherently conservative about
them.5 Considering them should bring home the gravity of morality and
how it is tied up with our conceptions of ourselves and our happiness
and well-being. Of course it is not usually simply other individuals that
cause suffering and unhappiness but the very organisation of society,
and its prevailing discourses with their taken-for-granted assumptions
and ways of understanding, which pre-exist any particular individual and
influence their identity. But these matter to us. The nature of these causes
is important precisely because of the harm or good they do. Social science
tends to be better at thinking about such causes than why they and their
effects matter to us.
The moral dimension is unavoidable. Hardly any social relationship
is intelligible without a recognition of the ethical responsibilities and
obligations which it carries with it, and . . . much of our moral life is
5
Nor need they have anything to do with religion. For those curious about the possible bases
of a plea for taking morality seriously, I should perhaps point out that I am an atheist.
I would argue that secularisation creates the possibility of our becoming responsible,
reflective moral subjects instead of relying upon established religious authority and dogma
for guidance, though of course we may fail to respond to this opportunity.
10
Introduction
11
just how far such sentiments and norms are variable is emphatically an
empirical question, not an a priori matter.
There is an idealist version of social constructionism which assumes
that anything can be socially constructed, as if by an exercise of collective wishful thinking, and hence that flourishing or suffering are no
more than what prevailing ways of thinking define them as, regardless of
how they relate to our capabilities and susceptibilities indeed, the latter
are themselves deemed to be voluntaristically constructed. On this view,
concepts of oppression, or violation, or abuse are incomprehensible, for
there is nothing independent of the practices to which they refer that
can be damaged by them: the damage can only exist in the mind of the
beholder (Soper, 1995). Certainly morality is socially constructed and
hence culturally variable, but if we are to understand this and avoid voluntarism we need to take the metaphor of construction more seriously,
not less. All construction uses materials, and a necessary condition for the
success of attempts at construction is that they use the materials according
to their properties properties that exist largely independently of the constructors and are not merely a product of wishful thinking, though they
may be products of earlier incidents of social construction, which in their
turn were constrained and enabled by the properties of the materials used
(Sayer, 2000a). The materials may be ideational as well as physical, but
ideational materials also have a degree of independence from the intended
uses to which actors attempt to put them. Some discursive constructions
fail because they fall on deaf ears, fail to resonate, or attempt materially
impossible projects. The object of morality is human well-being, and we
are beings who are capable of both suffering and flourishing, sometimes
regardless of how suffering and flourishing are construed.
Our judgements of such matters are fallible (subjective) assessments
of objective possibilities. When we use terms like domination, oppression or exploitation we imply that some harm, injustice or suffering
is objectively done, not merely, as subjectivism implies, that observers
dont like what they refer to and are upset by them. They allude to damage and suffering that we have good reason to believe exist objectively,
indeed exist even if we fail to recognise them (for example, presumably
sexism actually inhibited womens flourishing before it was identified as
doing so). Such terms have a descriptive as well as an evaluative content,
indeed the two are inseparable in such cases. Contrary to idealism, such
harms or suffering do not just exist in the mind of the beholder but refer
to damage done regardless of whether anyone observes it. To be sure,
there are many kinds of well-being and ideas about them are themselves
culturally variable. But they are also fallible (which is to say there is something independent of them about which they can be mistaken). Solitary
12
I will expand on this defence of a realist theory of value more fully in chapter 9.
Introduction
13
countries over the last twenty-five years. There are several possible reasons for this. The decline of deference and the blurring of distinctions
between popular and elite culture might imply that class inequalities matter less in the way people value themselves and others. And yet, popular
culture is still not only differentiated by class but, especially in literature
and television, very much about class or class stereotypes even though
it is rarely named as such.9 In mainstream British politics, New Labours
aversion to Old Labour appears to have made it risky to acknowledge
class, except in heavily coded terms, though the underclass is occasionally mentioned. In life-politics as well as mainstream politics, other
axes of inequality and difference particularly gender, race, and sexuality have come to the fore, and rightly so, given their previous neglect.
With the rise of feminism and anti-racism, important advances have been
made in popular and mainstream politics in establishing the injustice and
immorality of discrimination in terms of gender, race, and indeed other
differences such as sexuality and disability. But in many quarters their
recognition has come at the expense of interest in class. Thus egalitarianism has progressed on some new fronts while retreating on the class front,
producing an apparent shift from a traditional politics of distribution to
a new politics of recognition.10
There is a logic to this uneven development. bell hooks notes how class
has become an uncool subject in a US becoming ever more unequal
(hooks, 2000, p. 1). As a black woman living in Greenwich Village, she
is often assumed by local people to be a nanny or shop assistant. Her
mostly white neighbours
are social liberals and fiscal conservatives. They may believe in recognizing multiculturalism and celebrating diversity (our neighborhood is full of white gay men
and straight white people who have at least one black, Asian, or Hispanic friend),
but when it comes to money and class they want to protect what they have, to
perpetuate and reproduce it they want more. The fact that they have so much
while others have so little does not cause moral anguish, for they see their good
fortune as a sign they are chosen, special, deserving. (hooks, 2000, p. 3)
14
14
The word can is carefully chosen, precisely to acknowledge that economic inequalities
can also derive from ascriptive, discriminatory processes. See below, chapter 4.
E.g., Article 13 of the European Unions Treaty of Amsterdam (Walby, 2004).
For a review of the literature on social mobility and meritocracy, see Savage, 2000, and
for an interesting sustained analysis, see Marshall et al., 1997. It might be hoped that
an equal opportunities policy for class would change the reproduction of class from
a competition in which the winners of each race started the succeeding race with an
advantage, to a meritocratic one in which all started at the same point regardless of their
past position, but this would be wholly to underestimate the strength of path-dependence
of class reproduction in early life in terms of the mutual reinforcement of struggles for
economic, social, cultural and educational capital.
A more radical line of argument would be to argue that the only way to get equal
opportunities in employment would be to equalise the economic rewards of the
opportunities.
Introduction
15
In social science itself, concern with class has, until recently, also
been on the retreat, though research on social stratification has continued (Goldthorpe and Marshall, 1992); as Miche` le Barrett famously
remarked in 1992, class has become non grata or, as Beverley Skeggs
commented, ignored by those with the privilege to ignore it (Barrett
and Phillips, 1992; Skeggs, 1997). This may be because interest in class
was previously tainted by its association with socialist discourses which
ignored or marginalised gender, race and sexuality.15 It may also be that
class cannot easily be interpreted from within the theoretical frameworks
that are necessary for understanding phenomena such as gender and
sexuality; although class, like gender and race, is confirmed and contested at the level of recognition and identity, it is also produced to
a significant degree by processes operating independently of ascriptive
processes.
Whether class itself is considered to be of declining importance depends
on which of the variety of sociological concepts of class one uses.16 If one
takes class to presuppose class-consciousness and collective action on
the basis of strong subjective class identities, then these phenomena of
course have indeed declined. However, in addition to continuing, indeed
widening, economic inequalities, there is still, as Mike Savage argues
following Bourdieu, a keen sense of class difference in terms of multiple differentiations rather than simple, clear-cut boundaries along which
many differences fall (Savage, 2000). Actors have remarkably sensitive
class antennae, even if they cannot always articulate the distinctions that
they make. And whatever the sociological disputes over the meaning of
class, it continues to be a loaded moral signifier in everyday life (Savage
et al., 2001a, p. 875).
After many years of neglect, there have recently been signs of a revival
of interest in class, especially regarding how it is subjectively experienced.
It may help the reader to know how this book relates to this and other
literature.
Theoretical and empirical influences
This is not the first attempt to explore the moral significance of class.
There have been landmark studies by Tawney (1931) on equality, by
15
16
Strange complicities have resulted from the in my view justified critical reactions to
the practice of assessing class in terms of male head of household, and to patriarchal
socialist assumptions that class is about men, which, bizarrely, rejected class instead of
this restriction of class to men.
For reviews of the debates, see Crompton, 1998; Goldthorpe and Marshall, 1992;
Savage, 2000.
16
Runciman summarises his aim as understanding the relation between objective social
inequalities and peoples attitudes towards them (2nd edn, 1972, p. 382). While this is
a major part of my agenda too, I am also concerned with how inequalities can also be a
product of peoples attitudes to others.
Introduction
17
The analysis of the moral dimension of social life has progressed much more with respect
to gender than class. Although feminism tends to be wary of the concept of morality, perhaps because of its conservative associations, its critique of patriarchy is very
much a moral one, in the sense I have defined (Finch, 1989; Smart and Neale, 1999;
Sevenhuijsen, 1998; Tronto, 1993).
18
Introduction
19
development of the habitus, it is argued that dispositions towards resistance as well as compliance with circumstances can arise, even in the
absence of shifts to different parts of the social field where the habitus
has not adjusted to its context. Drawing upon the work of Adam Smith
and Martha Nussbaum I argue against certain sociologically reductionist
treatments of morality as a system of external, regulative norms. Instead,
the moral character of behaviour is held to be based primarily on actors
moral sentiments, which in turn are developed through social interaction.
Emotions are argued to have a cognitive aspect that provides evaluations
of actors circumstances in terms of their implications for their well-being.
Exploring the nature of commitments further illuminates lay normativity in a way that acknowledges not only its habitual, embodied or strategic
aspects but its non-instrumental and moral character.
As many observers have noted, there has been a shift in political concern from matters of economic distribution, traditionally associated with
class politics, to a concern with issues of recognition, associated with
the politics of gender, race and sexuality. But of course the experience of class also involves unequal recognition or misrecognition, or what
Bourdieu termed symbolic domination, or soft forms of domination. In
chapter 3, I outline how recognition has a moral element, how it is important for individuals and groups, how it takes two forms conditional and
unconditional and how it is related to matters of distribution of wealth
and resources.
Class is itself a contested concept, both in academe and everyday life,
and how academics and lay actors understand class makes a difference
to the moral significance they attach to it. In chapter 4, I attempt to
clarify some of the different versions of the concept, arguing that, properly understood, some of them are not mutually exclusive but compatible,
indeed indispensable. We need both abstract concepts of class to deal with
economic power and more concrete concepts to deal with the combination of economic power and status in influencing lives and experience, or,
in Bourdieus terms, different combinations of economic, social, cultural,
educational and other forms of capital. I also develop here the distinction
between identity-neutral and identity-sensitive mechanisms that produce
inequalities, and provide an alternative to Bourdieus approach to the
relations between class and gender.
The remaining chapters deal with the anatomy of the struggles of
the social field, the competitive strivings for goods in a broad sense
among individuals and groups with different assets and advantages, or
amounts and kinds of capital. In chapter 5, we deal first with the nature
of the struggle, and what it is for or over, and whether different groups are
striving for similar or different goods. Then we apply some distinctions
20
Introduction
21
It is my belief that in social science, as in everyday life, we will understand people better if we take their normative dispositions, concerns and
rationales seriously, rather than treating these as mere facts about them
which can be given a social location in relation to class, gender and race,
and then left at that, as if they were no different from facts about their
age or height. This does not require us to agree with their beliefs or
approve of their behaviour. Nor need it involve overestimating the extent
to which they deliberate on their actions and views, and underestimating
how much they do on automatic, though much of what we do in this
way is learned and intelligent. Nor need it imply an individualistic, voluntarist, explanation of social forms, as if the latter were simply the product
of the exercise of the will, which in this context would lead to a moralistic
explanation of social problems. What it does allow us to address is the
subjective experience of inequalities, how relations and differences are
negotiated, and above all what it is about them that matters to people.
Introduction
Class is something beneath your clothes, under your skin, in your reflexes, in your
psyche, at the very core of your being. (Annette Kuhn, 1995)
23
For example, Bourdieu makes a passing reference to ethical dispositions in Practical Reason
(Bourdieu, 1998, p. 70).
For critiques, see Alexander, 1995; Fowler, 1997; Sayer, 1999; Shusterman, 1999; and
especially Crossleys (2001) constructive critique, which deepens and strengthens the
concept of habitus by drawing upon the work of Merleau-Ponty.
24
Our perceptions and our practice, especially our perceptions of the social world, are
guided by practical taxonomies, oppositions between high and low, masculine (or manly)
and feminine, etc. The classifications which these practical taxonomies produce owe their
value to the fact that they are practical, that they make it possible to bring in just enough
logic for the needs of practice, neither too much fuzziness is often indispensable, particularly in negotiations nor too little, because life would become impossible (Bourdieu,
quoted in McCall, 1992, p. 840).
25
depends on the context. When they are activated, they produce results
which are always mediated in some way (facilitated, blocked, overridden
or refracted and modified) by the context, and indeed actors may be able
consciously to override them.4
The concept is used to explain the fact that the governance of most of
our actions lies in the middle of a continuum ranging from unconscious
reflexes to rational deliberation and choice. Our responses to the world are
mostly at the level of dispositions, feelings and embodied skills. When we
are in a familiar context, these dispositions give us a feel for the game,
an ability to cope and go on effectively without conscious deliberation
and planning. In such conditions, the workings of the habitus tend not
to be noticed; its influence is clearer when we experience the discomfort
of finding ourselves out of place, in an unfamiliar social setting, in which
we lack a feel for the game.
The early years are particularly formative.
Early experiences have particular weight because the habitus tends to ensure its
own constancy and its defence against change through the selection it makes
within new information by rejecting information capable of calling into question
its accumulated information, if exposed to it accidentally or by force, and by
avoiding exposure to such information . . . (Bourdieu, 1990c, pp. 601)
However, later experiences can modify the habitus and produce new dispositions, and skills, enabling people to react in new ways. To the extent
that their habitus does become modified, they may feel comfortable in
contexts where they might not have done earlier. Thus new parents gradually develop a changed habitus and feel for the game of parenting, as they
get used to caring. As Bourdieu acknowledges, a habitus can undergo
modification in the face of different fields or even due to an awakening of
consciousness and social analysis (Bourdieu, cited in Aboulafia, 1999,
p. 167).5
Although Bourdieu is usually at pains to stress actors attunement to
their circumstances and their acceptance of their lot in life it should not be
assumed that social habitats or positions present actors with harmonious,
complementary influences. On the contrary, people may find themselves
pulled in quite different, incompatible directions. The habitus is formed
through involvement in a variety of relations that intersect in the habitat and extend to other parts of the social field, and there is no reason
4
This is a critical realist way of elaborating the generative powers of the habitus (Sayer,
1992, 2000a). Failure to appreciate this double contingency leads to a deterministic
version of the concept of habitus.
In Sociology in Question he had referred to the permanent dispositions of the habitus
(Bourdieu, 1993, p. 86).
26
Even in the case of Bourdieus favourite example of the tennis player, the
habitus and the feel for the game are not acquired without some conscious
monitoring of actions on the part of the actor. As those who have tried to
acquire a feel for a complex, technical game know, be it tennis, dancing,
or indeed learning how to go on in a new social situation, these skills
are not acquired purely through unmonitored osmosis but require some
6
While there is therefore no reason why the concept of habitus should tie us to a unitary
conception of the self, we dont need to go to the opposite extreme of denying any degree
of autonomy, reflexivity or coherence in subjects, for susceptibility to social influences
presupposes them (Archer, 2000, 2003).
27
conscious effort. The tennis novice will never become skilled unless she is
motivated to learn and concentrates on what she is doing. (Wake up! Start
your backswing earlier! Move! shouts the coach.) Dancers talk about
getting a new move or style into the body, and this requires concentration
and practice in the sense of drilling. It is tempting to call this a shift
from intention to achievement or from plan to practice, but usually the
intentions are ill formed and ignorant. As readers of instruction manuals
on learning complex skills know, descriptions can be more trouble than
they are worth; rather, there is a creative process of adaptation or trial
and error, and attempts to imitate others (Crossley, 2001; see also Collier,
2003).7
2.
In most of Bourdieus accounts of the habitus, the structure of dispositions seems to arise through a process of osmosis and shaping, through
accommodation to material circumstances and social relations, like living in crowded housing or being accustomed to hard manual labour or
serving others. However, he does note that the habitus generates meaningful practices and meaning-giving perceptions (1984, p. 170). Ways of
thinking can become habitual. Once learned they change from something we struggle to grasp to something we can think with, without
thinking about them. In other words, for much of the time our conceptual apparatus is not itself the subject of reflection. One can therefore acknowledge the conceptual and concept-dependent dimensions of
social practices without assuming that this necessarily takes the form
of an ongoing rational discussion, as in the scholastic fallacy invited by
many interpretivist or hermeneutic approaches to social science. Orientations and behaviours such as condescension and deference involve habit,
feeling and comportment but they also imply tacit understandings and
evaluations: they involve intelligent dispositions (Wood, 1990, p. 214).
As Raymond Williams noted, thoughts can be felt, and feelings can be
thought (Williams, 1977, p. 132). Further, these dispositions relate to a
7
28
Understanding the point of complex matters such as the meaning of an unfamiliar technical concept may be gradual, because it takes time to learn how to use it in all the practical
contexts which give it sense. We can gain a feel for a certain kind of reasoning, such as
that used by economists or sociologists, but it still involves understanding and not merely
conditioning.
29
Nevertheless, despite his outstanding skill in the interpretation of discourses, discourse lacks a clear place in Bourdieus framework.
3.
In these ways we can begin to get beyond the kind of mind/body dualism that is implicit
in philosophies of social science and social ontologies which produce a split between
understanding and material causation. Instead we can think of mind as a kind of form
or organisation exhibited by the body in its structure and behaviour which has emergent
powers (Wood, 1990, p. 19). Reasons and other discursive objects can be causes and
become embodied (Fairclough et al., 2001). As Archer elaborates, practice is the wordless source of reason, for logic obtains its force indirectly from the practice of coping
with the differentiations, affordances and constraints of the world, including ourselves,
from representing necessity in the world through logical necessity in the relation between
statements (see Archer, 2000, pp. 14552; also Harre and Madden, 1975). The contrast
between the fuzzy and creative logic of practical understanding . . . [and] . . . the abstract
process of self-decipherment characteristic of scholastic interpretation (McNay, 2001,
p. 140) can therefore be overdrawn.
30
Accounts like this are both a testimony to the power and inertia of habitus
and the way in which it can be changed deliberately, at least in part, by
repeated practice aimed at the embodiment of new dispositions.
4.
31
John Frow suggests that some of these diagrams are misleadingly presented (Frow, 1995,
pp. 404).
32
Conservative resistance to change may be good, as many academics resisting audit culture
would argue.
As Mary Midgley comments: . . . some sociologists and existentialists, like to claim
officially that there is no such thing as human nature, so that nothing is naturally more
important than anything else. This means that (for instance) total immobility or total
solitude would be as good ways of life as any other, provided you were brought up to
them or decided to choose them. Man is supposed to be infinitely plastic . . . I find this
contention so obscure (even a piece of plasticine is not infinitely plastic: everything has
some internal structure) that I propose simply to wait till I find someone living by it . . .
Meanwhile, I propose to take it that we are so constituted as to mind more about some
things than about others (Midgley, 1972, p. 222).
33
The fact that this is not unique to humans does not of course prevent it being part of our
nature. Rorty falls into this simple non-sequitur in presuming that its non-uniqueness
means that it cannot be part of human nature (Archer, 2000, p. 41). Unique or distinctive
properties dont always tell us much about objects natures; e.g., a tigers stripes are
certainly distinctive but they dont tell us much about what it can and cant do, while
less distinctive features such as its anatomy, musculature and reproductive system tell us
a great deal.
34
pleasure and well-being incomprehensible, or at least as forms of selfdelusion. When a child resists something it is not necessarily because it
is subject to contradictory external influences, for there could be mutually consistent external influences to which they cannot adjust; some of
the younger interviewees in The Weight of the World seem to have resisted
their first habitat from the start (Bourdieu et al., 1999). Ironically, despite
his emphasis on practice and embodiment, Bourdieu does not deal adequately with their nature and preconditions in terms of corporeality. What
kinds of beings are people, such that they can acquire a habitus?
We can still acknowledge that most of our powers and susceptibilities
are socially acquired (though this very process presupposes enabling prediscursive and biological powers (Archer, 2000)). To see this we need to
avoid collapsing time, and note that our susceptibility to social shaping
at time t is constrained and enabled by the products of social shaping at
time t1, and hitherto. Thus, it is usually easier for a university tutor to
induce an upper middle class student to talk in seminars than a working
class student because of the way they have been shaped in the past, which
has given them different dispositions and skills or powers and susceptibilities. Similarly, a persons susceptibility to guilt and shame presupposes
already-acquired ethical and other values.
We should therefore not assume a perfect harmony or complicity
between habitus and habitat, or try to reduce one to the other, as in
either voluntarism or various kinds of determinism. Unless we recognise
the differences between habitus and habitat then we will prevent analysis of their interplay (Archer, 2000, p. 6). The phenomenon of the feel
for the game lends credibility to the idea of some kind of ontological
complicity between habitus and habitat, but the extent of the complicity may vary; there might even be some familiar situations in which it
may be difficult for actors to acquire a feel for the game. Moreover, they
can know or sense (fallibly, but with some degree of success) a rough
difference between circumstances which enable them to flourish and circumstances which do not, indeed this is a condition of their survival.
People are not merely shaped, but flourish or suffer. That some kinds of
beneficial or damaging effects may not be noticed, or may be misconstrued by actors, does not invalidate the obvious point that people do
not merely classify as if they subconsciously constructed disinterested
typologies but actively discriminate between the good and the bad, the
safe and the threatening, and so on. In their mostly subconscious and
fallible, but mostly practically-adequate ways, they value the world. That
so much social theory could miss such an obvious point is a sad testament
to its estrangement from practice and the normative character of life.
Certainly we can come to care about some of the things and relationships to which we are habituated, but there are also many for which we do
35
not care and indeed from which we would rather escape, despite having
an appropriate feel for the game. We can get used to living in crowded
conditions but still want space of our own; we can get used to doing without holidays but still want one; we can get used to a relationship and yet
still want to end it.
Bourdieu often comments on the way in which goods that are prescribed as socially valid and desirable for all are often only available to a
minority. He writes of activities, particularly those of education, in which
the subordinate class are expected to compete, noting that this is a competition which they have effectively lost before they have begun to play.
Yet this tension between expectations and possibilities need not always
result in resignation, compliance and the refusal of what is refused. It can
also result in longing for what is denied to the actor. As Carolyn Steedmans
account of her working class mothers life shows, refusal of what one is
given and encouraged to identify with (mothering) and intense longing
for what one is denied can become central to ones inner life, dominating
how everything is seen (Steedman, 1986). It is hardly surprising given
the relentless seduction of commodities, the glorification of educational
advancement and economic success, the pressure to conform to gender norms, and to be popular and attractive, accompanied by economic
insecurity, anomie, and loneliness, that unfulfilled longing can be so
powerful.
Longing and desire have a more primitive basis than mere internalisation of social influences. Humans are characterised not only by animal
lack, as in hunger for food, but desire for recognition and self-respect,
which they can only obtain through certain kinds of interactions with
others. The habitus not only classifies phenomena but values them, as
the expressions ill-disposed and well-disposed suggest. An object or
machine can have tendencies to behave in a certain way but it cannot be
well-disposed to some and ill-disposed to anything or care about them.
This is also central to the explanation of resistance, and why it can occur
during the formation of the habitus, and indeed can be constitutive of
the habitus. Acknowledging internal conversations and longing helps to
make sense of the obvious point that our relationship to the world is not
simply one of accommodation or becoming skilled in its games, but, at
least in some ways, one of wanting to be different and wanting the world
and its games to be different.
5.
Emotions
Bourdieus emphasis on the habitus draws attention to our partly subconscious orientation to the world and our feel for the game. As such,
it (curiously) ignores a much more conscious aspect of subjectivity, and
36
one central to the experience of class, namely emotion. I shall argue later
in the book that emotions such as pride, shame, envy and resentment tell
us a great deal about class and the difference it makes to our lives.
Although emotions are clearly embodied, sometimes visibly so, they
are not to be understood, as commonly supposed, as the antithesis of
reason, but as responses to and commentaries on our situations (Archer,
2000; Barbalet, 2001; Bartky, 1990; Helm, 2001). They are cognitive and
evaluative, indeed, essential elements of intelligence (Nussbaum, 2001,
p. 3).14 They are strongly related to our nature as dependent and vulnerable yet intelligent beings. Like reason, emotions are about something,
particularly things which are important to our well-being and which we
value, and yet which are not fully within our control. Thus, the loss of a
friend occasions a stronger emotional response than the loss of a pencil.
Emotions are not a redundant accompaniment to the business of life, like
muzak in a supermarket, but commentaries which relate to our concerns
and evaluations of the import of things (Helm, 2001). They are highly
discriminating evaluative commentaries on our well-being or ill-being in
the physical world (for example, pleasure in warmth), in our practical
dealings with the world (for example, the frustration of failing to execute
some task successfully), and in the social-psychological world (for example, self-esteem or shame) (Archer, 2000; Nussbaum, 2001).15 They are
relational not merely subjective in the sense of dispositions and emanations of subjects having no relation to objects/referents. Rather, they
are about the relation between the objective16 qualities of the subject, and
objects such as the actions of others. Their physical side, though often
prominent, is different from other kinds of physical experience; the physical pain from, say, backache, is different from the physical emotional
pain of bereavement or shame in that one knows that the latter have a
cognitive aspect.17
14
15
16
17
37
Emotional reason differs from unemotional reason in being hard to control. For example,
while one can choose to stop thinking about something of no emotional import, when
under stress, feeling ashamed, angry, anxious or bereaved it may be difficult or impossible
to stop the continual emotional churning through the same thoughts and feelings.
38
See chapter 3.
20
39
defined by mere discursive and practical convention a kind of insensitivity which would be considered appalling if exhibited in an emotionally
charged social situation such as bereavement (Rosaldo, 1993). As words
are often insufficient to describe them, the strongest emotions may be
concealed by the thinness of actors accounts of them. Though not as
strong as the emotions of grief and rage that Rosaldo had in mind, the
emotions associated with class are central to its experience. The very word
affect, with its academic, cold, clipped, distant, unemotional ring, seems
symptomatic of intellectual disdain and belittles the force and enormity
of what it refers to.21 Significantly, as a verb, to affect means to merely
simulate a response, such as surprise (i.e. to dissimulate or deceive), and
affectations are artificial manners.22 While the rationalistic tendencies
common in social science incline many to ignore emotions, to do so is
extraordinarily irrational: simply, emotions matter because if we did not
have them nothing else would matter. Creatures without emotion would
have no reason for living, nor, for that matter, for committing suicide.
Emotions are the stuff of life (Elster, quoted in Archer, 2000, p. 194).
6.
The causes, practices, or other people that matter most to actors are not
merely things which they happen to like or prefer but things in terms of
which their identities are formed and to which they are committed, sometimes to the extent that they will pursue them against their self-interest.
The ability to develop commitments is central to peoples well-being, and
one of the main reasons why inequalities of class are so important is that
they influence this process.
It might seem that Bourdieu acknowledges this since he comments
frequently on the way in which actors invest in particular practices, and
in many cases he frames this in terms of games, stakes and prizes (e.g.,
Bourdieu, 1998, pp. 76ff.; 1993, p. 18). The investment of the middle
classes in education is an example. However, the metaphors of investment
and games are in tension with Bourdieus Pascalian view of behaviour,
and inadequate for understanding the nature and strength of the attachments involved in commitments. Such metaphors, like those of capital,
profit and calculation, invite us to interpret investment as egotistical,
instrumental, involving competitive, reward-seeking behaviour. The tension created by the combination of economic metaphors associated with
21
22
Affect is also associated with non-cognitive views of emotions that I wish to oppose
(Nussbaum, 2001, p. 61n).
Ironically, affection, a common-enough emotional feeling and one that is hugely important for our well-being, is rarely acknowledged in sociology.
40
rational calculation, and exorbitant claims for the power of habitus relative to reasoning and reflexivity, runs throughout his work and structures
responses to it. Yet Bourdieu also vehemently rejects the rationalist, utilitarian reading (1998, p. 79, see also 1993), though the grounds on which
he defends himself are significant. They are primarily that actors are not
rational, self-interested decision-makers making investments, but, rather,
their habitus attunes them to the game. However, we dont have to flip
from a rationalist interpretation to an anti-rationalist one; as we have
pointed out, there is often a cognitive element in the learning/habituation
process, and actors clearly do sometimes think about what they have
invested themselves in as is implied by taking an interest. But the
important point is a rather different one. Actors also tend to invest emotionally in certain things not merely for the rewards but because they
come to see them as valuable in themselves, sometimes regardless of any
benefit to themselves.
The concept of commitments is superior to that of investment in games,
because it implies a stronger and more serious attachment, one that has
an emotional dimension and involves objects, practices, others and relationships which we care about. If we omit from the relationship between
habitus and habitat our ability to discriminate among phenomena according to their perceived implications for the well-being of others or ourselves, if we ignore emotions, then commitment seems little more than a
strong correspondence or deeply entrenched habit. Commitments imply
emotional, reasoned attachment. They can be in our self-interest for
example, allowing us to indulge ourselves but they can also be based on
altruism or be related to causes such as social justice or nationalism (Sen,
1999, p. 270).23 Did Pierre Bourdieu have a commitment to uncovering
the mechanisms of domination in society or did he merely have a feel for
the game of sociology? To be sure, his habitus presumably evolved in a
way which disposed him to do this, and he clearly had an outstanding feel
for the academic game, but it was surely also a commitment supported
by a rationale which was not mere rationalisation of the unavoidable but
had some normative justification.
Few people can list their commitments, and they may only notice
them when they are threatened. They usually emerge gradually and unintentionally through continued immersion in relationships and activities,
and through embodiment. Although the distinction between commitments and preferences is a fuzzy one, it is not merely one of strength of
23
Not every activity in which we invest our energies leads to a commitment. There may
be relatively short projects we get involved with that are complex, challenging and interesting, but to which we are not committed in the same way as we might be to, say, our
child. As always these distinctions are fuzzy.
41
attachment; there are important qualitative differences too. Where preferences are concerned we are generally willing to substitute something
else for what we prefer. I would prefer to do x (stay with my current bank),
but if y (another bank) is a good substitute I will give x up for y. If I am
committed to, say, my child or my political beliefs, then they cant be sold
or swapped for something else. I am committed to certain people, ideas
and causes and I cant be bought off, for they are ends in themselves,
not merely means to other ends. Moreover, in pursuing commitments we
tend to choose means that already prefigure and are consistent with those
ends, which is not necessarily the case for preferences (Archer, 2000,
p. 84).
Though they are rarely things that we plan to have in advance, our
commitments make up our character and without them we are likely to
feel rootless and lost. Losing or being prevented from pursuing commitments we have already formed leads to something akin to bereavement,
since through our commitment to x, x has captured something of us.
Changing my bank may cause me some trouble, but it need not affect
the kind of person I am or my well-being, as the loss of a commitment
might. It is nevertheless possible for commitments to weaken or go sour
over a period of time, producing a sense of disillusionment and loss,
and re-evaluation of priorities. Commitments also tend to be gendered,
with commitments to people being primarily associated with women, and
commitments to technical projects primarily associated with men. Class
and other social hierarchies further influence the kinds of commitment we
are able to develop, both in terms of differentiating them and in unequally
distributing the resources needed for pursuing them.
Not surprisingly given their importance for our well-being, commitments figure prominently in the struggles of everyday life. Consider a
familiar example: if we listen to people talking about their jobs, particularly in professional work, we are often reminded that workplaces are
fields of struggle in which self-interests clash, in which commitments
may differ from self-interest or be too closely related or in which nonwork-related commitments may be in conflict with work duties and commitments. People may work for organisations for decades and become
thoroughly habituated to them, yet while they certainly have a feel for the
game they can still experience conflict between how they feel they ought
to act and are allowed to act, and between how they feel they ought to be
treated and are treated. They may feel that they are struggling to maintain
their integrity in the face of pressures from others, be they fellow workers,
clients, or managers relaying budget pressures or government directives.
Neither an economic instrumentalist account nor a purely Pascalian view
does justice to what can be for some workers an overwhelming experience.
42
From the outside many of the conflicts may seem petty, but the mixtures
of ambition, struggle for self-esteem and emotional commitment (all of
which can be tangled up together) can have a huge impact on workers
lives at the extreme, prompting them to leave secure jobs and uproot
their lives. The identities and commitments which are being challenged
are invested in consciously and normatively, and not just through habituation. They are not simply about power and resources, but over what is
considered to be good. This reminds us that not all struggle is for power
or for resources; while these may sometimes be seen as ends in themselves, their importance lies in the fact that they are necessary conditions
for allowing people to live fulfilling lives, in which commitments are an
essential part.
7.
Ethical dispositions
Having developed the concept of the habitus and proposed that emotions
are evaluative judgements of matters perceived to be important to peoples
well-being, and acknowledged the way in which people come to value
certain things in themselves rather than merely instrumentally, we can
now address what often matters to them most namely their sense of, or
feel for, how people should treat one another. Again we can start from
Bourdieu.
At one level, Bourdieu recognized the deeply evaluative character of
social behaviour in terms of how people judge themselves and members of other groups, and the practices and objects associated with them.
However, his interests in this regard lay primarily in the valuation of
these things in strategic, functional and aesthetic terms. This is partly
a consequence of his Hobbesian, interest- and power-based, model of
social life. But actors also value others and their conduct in terms of
their goodness or propriety. I wish to argue that the habitus includes ethical dispositions, which, when activated, produce moral emotions or what
Adam Smith termed moral sentiments (Smith, 1759).24 It is in virtue of
these that people often produce moral responses spontaneously, without
reflection; indeed, it is interesting that we would have doubts about the
moral character of someone who couldnt respond morally to events without first deliberating on them. Thus, on seeing a pensioner being mugged
we might respond instantly with horror, anger and sympathy, before we
had chance to reflect on what had happened. Like other dispositions,
24
In a rare reference to the ethical dimension of the habitus, Bourdieu argues that the word
ethos better refers to these dispositions than does ethics, which suggests coherent
explicit principles (Bourdieu, 1993). For a slightly different analysis to mine of the relationship between sentiments, dispositions and emotions, see Rawls, 1971, pp. 47985.
43
ethical dispositions, virtues and vices are acquired and become embodied through practice involving relations with others, so people become
habitually honest, trusting, or deceitful and suspicious. The activation of
these dispositions has an emotional aspect, evident in sentiments such as
gratitude, benevolence, compassion, anger, bitterness, guilt and shame.
There can also be unethical dispositions and immoral sentiments.25 As
Norman Geras notes, we all know the motivational range here:
comprising, with all the admirable qualities and excellences, also elements which
are less than admirable, and indeed some which are downright repugnant. This
range is simply the stuff of ordinary existence. It is a form of practical experience
taken from every area of life: every family, every circle of friends and acquaintances, every neighbourhood, every milieu, social stratum, vocation, organization.
It is an experience again, together with what is generous, loving, courageous and
so on of jealousies and vanities, petty unkindness and hatreds, wilful deceits,
self-importance and self-promotion. (Geras, 1998, p. 99)26
In addition there may be xenophobic, racist, sexist and homophobic dispositions, involving the projection of bad or feared characteristics onto
the other; like dispositions which we would be happier to term moral,
they have an evaluative character.
It is common to draw a distinction between ethics and morality in
which the former refers to actors sensuous dispositions which they absorb
largely subconsciously through socialisation, while the latter refers to relatively formal, universal, public norms, though sometimes the terms are
reversed (Smiths moral sentiments are closer to ethical dispositions than
norms; philosophy students generally study ethics rather than morality). There is indeed a difference between the two, but there are also
strong relations between them, as acknowledged in Hegels concept of
ethical life (Wood, 1990; Yar, 1999). While it is mainly the informal practices that concern us in this book, it is possible for formal moral norms
to be internalised and embodied. Thus, although the Kantian theory of
morality has rightly been criticised for being alienated from actors dispositions and feelings, it is possible for actors to accept, invest in and
identify with such principles and others so that they become habitual.
We may acquire an embodied sense of duty and self-restraint that overrides certain dispositions which we formerly held; indeed, this process
25
26
Normative moral and political philosophy understandably focuses on the nature of the
good and the right, and if bad and wrong are acknowledged at all they are treated as
aberrations rather than all-too-common tendencies whose origins need to be explained
(Alexander, 2003). For a rare exception see Glover, 1999.
Geras continues: It yields to us a knowledge complementary to the one we have from the
Holocaust itself: a knowledge of the ordinary raw materials of great evil, those common
vices and human failings which can become, in another setting or combination, suddenly
exorbitant.
44
45
ethical. Some experiences, like blood-doning, may be consciousnessraising, while others, like a night out with the lads, may be
consciousness-lowering. In either case the process of change is likely
to take place through small steps. For example, in the negative direction, people may find that minor immoral acts pave the way for the
sanctioning of major ones, though they may realise, usually too late,
that they have crossed a moral boundary (Glover, 2001, p. 35).29
Social action is influenced by an ongoing mutual and self-monitoring of
conduct, as expounded by Adam Smith in the Theory of Moral Sentiments,
not only in confronting serious moral dilemmas but in the most ordinary
situations, such as conversation, where we have to evaluate how we are
being treated and how we are treating the other (Smith, 1759:1984).
We imagine how others well-being will be affected by our actions, and
how a spectator would evaluate our own actions, so as to consider what
to do. This process of self- and mutual evaluation is crucial both for our
well-being and for social order, and of course the two are linked. The
self-monitoring need not involve invoking a generalized other, as Mead
called it, nor need we suppose that the imagined spectator succeeds in
being impartial or achieves an Archimedean position (Griswold, 1999).
In familiar situations, the monitoring and evaluation can be done on
automatic as part of our feel for the game, but in more difficult and
less familiar situations it may require conscious deliberation. Evaluative
behaviour is not reducible to mere primitive responses like those to heat
and cold, for we also develop an evaluative feel for the game, indeed a
feel for the evaluative game, and become practised in forms of judgement which have particular logics or structures, albeit unnoticed ones.
It is these structures that moral philosophers often try to identify, for
example in distinguishing envy from resentment, shame from guilt, or
compassion from pity.30 These are not merely conceptual structures but
embodied psychological dispositions which may be activated by certain
events.
Ethics or morality have a conventional character because they are social
products and we do not have to conform to them indeed if this were
not the case, there would be no need for normative ideas about what we
should do. The conventional aspect is also implied by the etymological
link between ethics and ethos, and morality and mores. This, coupled
with an acknowledgement of the considerable degree of variety in such
dispositions and norms among societies, is sometimes associated with
29
30
This is a tendency taken advantage of in military training: for example, novice soldiers
are made to alter their ethical disposition towards violence through bayonet practice.
E.g., Nussbaum (1996, 2001), Williams (1993).
46
For example, even Durkheim, in The Division of Labour in Society, views moral rules as
obligatory, desirable and having an aura of sacredness and tending to be functional for
the survival of society, hence ignoring their normative content and force and reducing
them to special conventions backed up by sanctions (what is moral about such rules?)
(Durkheim, 1984). In Suicide (1951) he equates the moral with the social, but presents a
more sophisticated analysis which acknowledges the psychological, insofar as the social
engages with longing and desire (pp. 246ff.), both as a precondition for their fulfilment
and as a regulative and moderating influence on them. While he examines moral motives
for certain kinds of suicide, he does not go deeply into their meanings, being more
interested in their distribution and sociological correlates.
47
non-discursive dispositions and their discursive awareness and knowledge. Actors make sense of themselves and their well-being in terms of
their cultures, just as scientists can only observe the world in theory-laden
ways. But just as in science, theory-laden observation is not necessarily theory-determined but can still register certain mistakes and failed
expectations, so actors may find some of their own cultural interpretations unsatisfactory without going beyond the interpretive resources
offered by their own culture. Like any discourse, cultural discourses are
heterogeneous and fallible and they often provide resources for their own
critique.
To be sure, to some extent, actors ethical dispositions and beliefs relate
to their social location and interests, for example, in relation to gender
and class (e.g., Bartky, 1990; Lamont, 1992; Tronto, 1994), but they can
also be based on reflection and engagement with different ideas and hence
come to differ from what might be expected. We do not treat Bourdieus
work merely as an expression of his social position and trajectory; rather
we evaluate his claims and assume the reasons he offers for them to
be causally responsible32 for his making them, though of course they
could be rationalisations, disguises or evasions of the real reasons for
making them. The interviewees in the Weight of the World do not merely
explain to Bourdieu and his fellow researchers their local conventions;
rather, they voice deeply felt disapproval of many of them. In some
cases their despair and rage appears to be all-consuming. A bland, antinaturalist conventionalism simply cannot begin to understand the extent
or profundity of the normative contestation of social life. Ethical dispositions, beliefs and norms are indeed likely to vary across social space,
reflecting social divisions and how people have been treated and how
they have been allowed to treat others, but they also strikingly cross-cut
social divisions. Smith himself noticed this, arguing that moral sentiments
were less affected by custom and fashion than are aesthetic sentiments
(Smith, 1759:1984, V.2.1, p. 200). There are several, related, reasons for
this.
First, ethics, concerning primarily how people (ought to) treat one
another, is more socially regulated and momentous than matters of aesthetic taste.33 For example, it matters little to me what you or your possessions look like; what is more important is how you treat me, whether
you respect my autonomy and needs, whether you take advantage of my
vulnerability, and so on.
32
33
For defences of the assumption that reasons can be causes see Bhaskar, 1979; Collier,
1994; Sayer, 1992, 2000a.
I argue later in chapter 9 that although they are always culturally interpreted in various
ways, at least some moral issues concern transhistorical features of humanity.
48
Second, while ethical dispositions are likely to be influenced by socialisation under specific, concrete circumstances, they are also applied to
novel situations; indeed that is their practical point they do not merely
provide us with evaluations of what exists or has happened but orient
our future actions. There is more at work here than a merely pragmatic
logic an economy of practice like that associated with the deployment of other dispositions for the generalisation of ethical behaviour is
normatively enforced. Moreover, as Jeffrey Alexander puts it: Values possess relative independence vis-`a-vis social structures because ideals are
immanently universalistic. This is so . . . because they have an inherent
tendency to become matters of principle that demand to be generalized
(1995, p. 137). Alexander cites research in developmental psychology,
which with the signal and revealing exception of behaviourism supports
the acquisition of this process of generalisation. The recognition of a form
of morality involving concrete rather than abstract others is not incompatible with this for this too involves a process of going beyond ones own
position (see also Benhabib, 1992, chapters 5 and 6). Preferential treatment of certain others (for example, ones children) is therefore typically
expected and seen as proper rather than as unethical, though how far
responsibilities are expected to extend to others varies and is a subject
of debate (see, for example, Goodin, 1985; Tronto, 1994; Unger, 1996).
This generalising tendency of morality is not at all in contradiction with
its localised origins in particular relations:
It is because we have specific commitments to specific individuals and groups that
we can then go on to recognize the claim of all human beings . . . It is because
we first form ties with parents, siblings and friends that we are subsequently able
to extend our sympathies to other human beings with whom we are less closely
connected. (Norman, quoted in Goodin, 1985, p. 4)
49
Even the success of acts of deceit depends on others assumptions of honesty and trustworthiness.
Its also interesting that racists and sexists sometimes preface expressions of prejudice
with protestations that they believe in equality, but . . ..
I shall elaborate this discussion of moral boundary drawing in chapter 7.
50
norms which to some extent are treated as universal rather than groupspecific. Insofar as they concern actual behaviours, not mere stereotypes,
it is possible to identify behaviour which contradicts rather than confirms
such stereotypes; we may sometimes notice that the stigmatised other
behaves ethically while the respected peer sometimes behaves unethically.
To be sure, we may relate to others in ways that imply double standards,
but we do not operate with totally different standards in different contexts. Treating the same action in the same way whoever does it, acting
without regard for persons, is itself a common moral principle, indeed
it is intrinsic to concepts of fairness and the virtue of integrity.37 Hence,
although it may be incompletely carried through, moral thought involves
a generalising moment which can cross the boundaries between social
groups; indeed, it is to this that we owe our ability to criticise inequalities
such as those of class. Criticism whether by lay people or academics
of domination, unfairness, hypocrisy and inconsistency therefore implies
the existence of moral norms in the sense that I have defined them. Later
in the book, I shall argue that we cannot make much sense of lay understanding of class, in all its ambivalence, unless we appreciate this duality.
Conclusion
The concept of habitus is expected by Bourdieu to carry a heavy explanatory burden. It functions as a summarising concept for complex processes
which have not just a sociological dimension but aspects studied by psychology and neurophysiology. In effect, the concept is a product of sociological disciplinary imperialism, reflecting the disciplines competition
with and aversion to psychology and biology.38 However, suitably qualified, the concept can serve as a provisional filler for a space in which a
great deal of further post-disciplinary work needs to be done. To abandon the concept of habitus because Bourdieu exaggerates its influence
would be to throw the baby out with the bathwater. No other sociological
concept can help us understand the embodied character of dispositions,
their generative power and their relation to the wider social field. The difficult question is how far to invoke it. I want to retain and modify rather
than drop the concept and the associated Pascalian view of action. This
requires us to moderate the claims made by Bourdieu for the explanatory power of the concept, and to supplement it with a recognition of
the close relationships between dispositions and conscious deliberation,
37
38
This does not exclude the possibility of also recognising that to treat unequals as equal
is unfair.
Bourdieus disciplinary imperialism (e.g., 1993) is surprising given his perceptive analysis
of the struggles of the academic field in works such as Homo Academicus (1988).
51
Introduction
As many commentators have noted (e.g., Fraser, 1995; Honneth, 2001;
Phillips, 1999), until the 1980s, equality in terms of distribution was seen
as central to political philosophy and radical politics, whether under the
banner of Rawls and other social democratic positions or various kinds of
Marxism, whereas since then, the avoidance of exclusion and disrespect
has in many cases overtaken inequality as a priority. Repeated refusal
of recognition to an individual can produce serious psychological damage and refusal of recognition to a group also damages its well-being
and ability to function in wider society (Taylor, 1994). As Nancy Fraser
puts it, it prevents people participating on a par with others in social
interaction (Fraser, 1999, p. 34). Many oppressive social relations such
as those of racism and homophobia involve systematic misrecognition
part refusal of recognition and part stigmatised recognition. While this
shift from distribution to recognition has been progressive in highlighting
hitherto ignored forms of oppression, some observers have regretted the
fact that it seems to have been coupled with an abandonment of concern for class politics, which have been associated with the politics of
distribution (Phillips, 1999). The retreat from class was not merely illogical but decidedly untimely, for it coincided with the rise of attempts by
neoliberals to legitimise class inequalities.
The most prominent kinds of recognition claims in contemporary politics have been ones relating to cultural difference, including differences
in sexuality, religion and lifestyle. In such cases the groups in question
claim recognition for their legitimacy and value. However, the microand macro-politics of class are different. The poor are not clamouring for
poverty to be legitimised and valued. They want to escape or abolish their
class position rather than affirm it (Coole, 1996). At the same time, they
do not merely want more material wealth, but recognition and respect
This chapter is particularly indebted to John ONeills essay on Economy, equality and
recognition (ONeill, 1999). Thanks too to Majid Yar for discussions.
52
53
as well, in terms of their moral worth, and perhaps for certain aspects of
their culture.1 Class antagonisms are therefore about more than distribution of income and material goods, but they involve a different kind of
recognition from that highlighted in identity politics, one that is as old as
inequality itself. As historians such as E. P. Thompson and James Scott
have argued, political antagonisms, including those of class, are typically
driven by moral concerns and a sense of injustice, and not merely by the
pursuit of wealth and advantage (Honneth, 2003; ONeill, 1999; Scott,
1990; Thompson, 1963).
Even in the case of the contemporary working class, it appears that slights to ones
dignity and close surveillance and control of ones work loom at least as large
in accounts of oppression as do narrower concerns of work and compensation.
(Scott, 1990, p. 23)
Gender politics are more mixed in that they involve complex mixtures of legitimation and
refusal of gendered characteristics, for example attempting both to value skills associated
with women without idealising them and to de-gender them.
54
55
56
57
It is easy to be sceptical about this in the abstract but what else would sceptics propose we
ought to do? I therefore follow Yar in rejecting the pathological renditions of recognition
inferred by Levinas and others (Yar, 2001a). To recognise the other properly is precisely
not to colonise them or deny their difference. In the absence of this possibility, progressives
are ironically thrown back onto the bleak alternative of a quasi-liberal contract of mutual
indifference (Geras, 1998), in which strangers merely avoid their others (e.g., Young,
1990).
As James Gilligans work on violent criminals shows, their behaviour derives consistently
from severe deprivation of recognition and violent treatment in earlier life (Gilligan,
2000).
To achieve an adequate account of this process, it is essential to avoid collapsing development into an instant, so that it appears that subjects are either pre-social or purely the
product of externally induced subjectification. The development of subjects at time t is
predicated on earlier rounds of development involving the interaction of both biological
and social influences and preconditions.
Reason in this context should not be equated with the elevated, highly reflective forms it
takes in philosophy, including the philosophy that reflects on it, but should be understood
as everyday thought processes. Note, also, that I would want to relate recognition of others
not only to their freedom but to their vulnerability and capability of suffering. This could
also be taken to involve a natural capacity for sympathy, which although highly developed
in humans appears to be present in some non-human species too. These emergent powers
presuppose but are irreducible to those of our physical being.
58
In principle, this mutuality of recognition is hugely significant for arguments about equality and human well-being for it seems to imply that only
in a relatively equal and free society can all achieve recognition; indeed,
the recognition and freedom of each would seem to be a condition of the
recognition and freedom of all. However, in practice, it is possible that
the conditions for recognition can be met selectively and locally within
particular groups, and therefore the need to be recognised by others does
not provide a powerful impetus for equality unless it is institutionally reinforced. The dominant can find recognition within their own group, be it
one of class, gender or some other kind, while simultaneously exploiting
others:
[I]n modern societies people prefer to conceal from themselves their dominion
over others, by sequestering the others in different parts of town or in distant
lands, or by representing the others as formally free and equal to themselves.
In these ways, people enjoy simultaneously the (real) advantages of oppressing
others and the (at least pretended) self-certainty that only a society of free and
equal persons can offer. . . . Consistently with Hegels argument, I might find selfcertainty in the parochial society constituted by a privileged race, caste or class,
whose members mutually recognize one another as persons but treat outsiders as
non-persons. (Wood, 1990, p. 93)
In the extreme, others may be treated as if they were completely outside actors moral
community, but I suggest that it is more normal for there to be gradations in moral
considerability.
59
contrasts with the other means that their own identities become negatively
rather than positively constituted, so that either granting recognition to
the other or removing them would mean a loss of their own identity.
Any demands for recognition from those who are stigmatised in this way
cannot be met because it would come from those not considered fit to give
it. In addition, the resulting identities have nothing positive to offer other
groups or communities from which they could benefit, and which would
bring further recognition.9 Othering is likely to support and be supported
by relations of economic inequality, domination and social exclusion, and
indeed to be stimulated as a rationale for these (Tilly, 1998), but it can
also derive from xenophobia. Once formed, it is difficult to remove, and
at worst it can prompt self-fuelling mutual contempt and revenge. I shall
comment further on these issues in chapter 7.
Gloomy though these conclusions undoubtedly are, especially after the
hopes raised by the arguments concerning mutual recognition, they do
not at all mean that the demands of the subordinate for recognition are
necessarily ineffectual, for they can also appeal to the need for recognition on which the dominant depend, and this in effect is what struggles
for recognition do, such as those of civil rights, anti-racist and feminist
movements. Nor does it mean that the dominant can afford completely
to disregard the recognition of the dominated, although such recognition
will necessarily take flawed forms. Even if they do not need it to stay in
power, that is, even if its pursuit is not strictly necessary for maintaining
their material advantages and the recognition that these bring within their
own group, they typically strive to establish their legitimacy beyond it, as
Weber noted.
The framework I have outlined here enables us to understand the
incomplete, restricted forms of recognition that exist in modern societies,
while indicating the tendencies that could generalise them through egalitarian movements. In one sense the latter points might be seen merely as
normative arguments, but what is important is that they are grounded in
existing tendencies or potentials which derive from our character as social
beings, albeit tendencies that can all too easily be overridden. Without
this, the demand for recognition would be empty and arbitrary, with no
rationale or connection to existing tendencies, and lacking any connection
to equality.10
10
60
14
15
In common with many other authors I do not find it useful to distinguish respect from
recognition, but see respect, along with esteem, as part of recognition.
This need not preclude recognition of unavoidable or benign differences.
Honneth also identifies recognition of others as equal citizens as the basis of self-respect,
but this can be a product of an instrumental, contractual approach to recognition, having
little to do with respect.
Significantly these are groups which, by their very nature, deny even the unconditional
kind of recognition to their victims.
Such an assumption would be (a) idealist (problems only exist in the mind of the beholder
or are constructed performatively); (b) relativist (there are no grounds for choosing
among competing claims), and (c) crypto-normative (the concern with problems of
recognition indicates a normative concern for well-being, but one which is not carried
through into judgements of what is good or bad and why), and hence useless.
61
In other cases, where the others concerned are from a different culture
from our own, judgements about whether to grant conditional recognition can only reasonably be made after some success has been achieved
in coming to understand the other in non-ethnocentric terms a process
which, as we have noted, may be long and difficult. Not surprisingly, in
practice, premature (mis)judgements about conditional recognition are
common.
Although theorists like Mead and Honneth have argued that conditional recognition depends on individuals achieving things which others
have not (Honneth, 1995, p. 125), I would argue that while this is sometimes the case, conditional recognition is also given for good enough
performance in valued but ordinary activities such as parenting, teaching, cooking, nursing, or professional work, etc., and indeed for mundane
virtues such as fortitude, civility and sociability. In such cases there can be
not only self-esteem from recognised proficiency but a sense of pride and
solidarity in having abilities, skills and virtues shared with others.16 There
is also sometimes an awareness of the downside of individual achievement, in terms of unbalanced lives, aloofness, ruthlessness, selfishness
and exploitation of others whose contributions do not get to be objectified and celebrated. The achiever in one area of life may be compensating
for deficiencies in another, such as sociability. The everyday pursuit of
well-being can involve consideration of such trade-offs (Lamont, 2000).17
Judgements like these about conditional recognition are part of ordinary
life; as we shall see in chapter 7, they are part of the complex mix of lay
feelings about class.
However, it is vital to appreciate that in some cases, lack of achievements or of behaviour deserving recognition may result from distributional inequalities. If you have only the bare minimum of resources,
you cannot achieve much. Literature on the struggle for recognition has
tended to overlook that it implies not simply unspoken or occasionally
more explicit demands and counter-demands for recognition by others,
but a striving to be able to live and act in ways deserving of recognition.
It is thereby connected to distributional demands through the need for
access to conditions that support such ways of living. The suffering of
the unemployed derives from denial of income and lack of recognition,
16
17
One can also take pleasure from being involved in activities in which there are others
whose performance is superior to ones own but which serve as a source of inspiration
and pleasure rather than low self-esteem (ONeill, 1999). (See chapter 5.)
A white American worker interviewed by Lamont said of ambition: You miss all of
life . . . A person that is totally ambitious and driven never sees anything except the spot
they are aiming at (ibid., p. 110). This could be a rationalisation of the workers own
lack of success, but it is patronising to assume that such critical judgements are never
any more than this.
62
and lack of access to the means to remedy it. Disregard of these mitigating circumstances by the dominant and continual disrespect or refusal of
recognition to the less fortunate and the excluded often produces antisocial behaviour in the latter, which then in turn strengthens that refusal.
Those who scorn the demands of socially excluded groups for respect
or esteem, on the grounds that they have not clearly earned it, callously
overlook the need of such groups for both resources to be able to achieve
much and unconditional recognition of their needs and powers as human
beings. These dynamics of recognition and misrecognition are typical of
the micro-politics of the social field.
Conditional recognition, like unconditional recognition, is distorted
by relations of domination. In relations among equals, where recognition
is freely given, conditional recognition of someones exceptional virtues
may give rise to (conditional) deference, but this is of a different kind
altogether from deference within a relation of domination. I may defer to
someone who has qualities I admire, where those qualities have in no way
been achieved at my expense or anyone elses. But deferential behaviour
of the subordinated towards the dominant is of a different kind, implying
resentment of advantages and contempt. Even though the dominant may
have certain admirable qualities, their reliance on the subordination and
unreciprocated service of others is liable to taint admiration and deference from the subordinate, in both its production and reception. At times
this may be made more explicit through expressions of excessive deference involving thinly disguised sarcasm. This is a soft weapon that the
subordinate can use against the soft forms of domination, for it can make
the dominant feel uncomfortable and disrespected. If the dominant then
castigate the subordinate for their sarcasm, this is likely to backfire, for it
makes it all the more clear that the hoped-for recognition is devalued by
being mandatory rather than freely given, and hence doomed to be unsatisfactory. Alternatively, if the admiration and deference are sincere, but
disproportionate to the virtues which are the object of their admiration
a common situation where the subordinate have been denied access to the
means both to achieve such things and to make well-founded judgements
about the qualities in question it may also make the subject of their deference uncomfortably aware that they do not deserve this recognition.
Those who, like the middle classes, find themselves, by the accident of
birth, in advantageous positions such that they can easily achieve valued things, may be embarrassed and disturbed by the compliments of
those who lacked those advantages; as a middle class academic, I am
sometimes embarrassed by the apparently sincere deference of those less
fortunate than me regarding the fact that I have written books, because
I am aware of the unjustified inequality in our positions. But if I receive
63
compliments from those who are similarly positioned, such that they can
make an informed judgement of their quality and significance, then the
recognition is free from such taint because it is embedded in a relation of
equality.
Conditional recognition is itself differentiated according to the kinds
of qualities being evaluated. Most clearly, recognition of achievements
is different from recognition of moral virtues such as those of friendliness or generosity, and often neither of them are reflected in individuals
economic position and rewards (which might be seen in terms of economic recognition). Actors are commonly well aware of these differences
(Dont think this makes you any better than us), though some may treat
one kind of quality as a surrogate for another, for example, income as
an index of worth (Lamont, 1992, 2000). Moreover, as we have seen,
under conditions of inequality, feelings about self and other become further complicated by awareness of the uneven and arbitrary distribution
of conditions favourable to the development of the valued achievements
and qualities.
Criteria of recognition are also culturally variable, insofar as different goods may be differently valued, as Miche` le Lamonts comparisons
of US and French working class and upper middle class men demonstrate (Lamont, 1992, 2000). Further, difference itself implies differential understanding of others and hence problems of recognition. These
may vary from the minor simply feeling out of place or not fitting in
when in the company of certain others to damaging forms of misrecognition which blight ones life-chances. To some extent culture may also
vary with economic circumstances and vice versa. Especially in the light of
Lamonts work, which shows class differences in the valuation of achievement relative to moral qualities of integrity, solidarity and reliability, it is
interesting to speculate on whether the former are more valued in highly
unequal societies and the latter in more equal societies.
Links between recognition and distribution
This account already implies the existence of strong relationships between
distribution and recognition, but we can now make them more explicit.
Rather than counterposing recognition to distribution, with recognition
referring to the ideational realm and distribution to the material realm,
we need to appreciate that recognition cannot be limited to the realms
of idealised communication and signification, but is thoroughly materialised in the distribution of material goods (Fraser, 1999; Yar, 1999,
p. 202; see also Yar, 2001b). If a rich university department were to
give all of its students computers, except for a minority to whom it gave
64
19
20
65
22
23
By the same token, defenders of inequality have to appeal to criteria for unequal recognition. As Fraser argues, redistributive policies may backfire in terms of recognition thus
the receipt of means-tested welfare benefits may be seen as demeaning and stigmatising
(Fraser, 1999).
Because were worth it a slogan now used in pay bargaining is, interestingly, an
adaptation of the slogan Because youre worth it, first used by advertisers to persuade
us to buy their products. In the latter case it fits with the contemporary amoral emphasis
of neoliberal culture on individuals feeling good about themselves, in which self-esteem
is not necessarily tied to doing anything worthy of esteem. Of course the workers have
publicly to justify their claim whereas consumers do not.
Defenders of capitalism often offer a rationale in defence of this arbitrariness, to the
effect that the amoral mechanisms and the inequalities they produce are necessary for
the efficient functioning of capital, from which the poor arguably benefit in the long run,
by being better off than they would in the absence of markets.
66
Hayeks case, he is quite explicit that fortunes in markets may have more
to do with luck than merit (Hayek, 1960).24 Justifications of superior
wealth on the basis of achievements worthy of conditional recognition
are always open to contestation. Up to a point, conspicuous wealth may
(intentionally or unintentionally) produce envy and even admiration, but
others may discover or suspect that the owner has not done anything to
deserve the wealth. As regards the pre-requisites of capitalism (as opposed
to its contingent forms and accompaniments), the relationship of recognition to economic distribution is therefore not reversible: economic distribution depends on luck and scarcity and hence does not necessarily
reflect qualities worthy of recognition. Moreover, modern economies do
not operate simply according to the pre-requisites of capitalism but are
responsive to other, contingently related, sources of inequality such as
divisions of gender and race, which influence distribution via unequal
recognition. As a matter of fact, then, distribution under capitalism does
not have much to do with recognition; but from a normative point of
view, one could argue that it ought to.
The mistaken idea that distribution through markets does in practice
reflect and provide due recognition of merit (youre paid what you are
worth and worth what you are paid) is likely to appeal to the rich, and it is
also not unusual to encounter deferential versions of the idea in popular
discourse. (There are equivalents of this with respect to gender where
women generously accept mens advantages as deserved.) This kind of
deference may sometimes be seen positively as an unselfish acceptance
of others merits, though it might also result from wishful thinking, that
is, from a slide from normative feelings that distribution should reflect
recognition to positive assumptions that it actually does. Such are the
twists and turns of moral sentiments regarding inequality.
Conclusions
A broadly Hegelian analysis of recognition illuminates its role in the development of subjects, and hence the social psychology of interpersonal
relations. The master/slave dialectic identifies the limits and tendencies
of recognition within relations of domination, as compared to recognition
among equals. Although the analysis points towards the need for more
equal relations, the very durability of actual relations of domination shows
that these normative pressures can easily be overridden by interests in
24
This is not an anomalous element of his philosophy, for it enables him to argue that
the poor are just unfortunate rather than unjustly treated, and therefore in no need of
transfers from the rich.
67
continued domination, while the negative consequences in terms of failures of adequate recognition between dominant and subaltern can be
compensated by recognition among equals within their respective communities. Nevertheless, the analysis is still useful for understanding the
micro- and macro-politics of recognition in relation to class, and the associated feelings of frustration, deference and resentment that are likely to
be generated.
Recognition and misrecognition are undoubtedly important aspects of
social life and sources of conflict, ones that are not reducible to matters
of distribution, though as we have seen recognition and distribution are
closely related. Recent interest in recognition harks back often unknowingly to early concerns of the Enlightenment (ONeill, 1999), but goes
beyond it in addressing the misrecognition and othering that are central
to sources of oppression such as those to do with race, gender, sexuality and disability. The focus on recognition developed by authors such
as Honneth also helps to take us beyond interest-based views of conflict such as Bourdieus. However, it does not take us far into the moral
grammar of social conflicts (the subtitle of Honneths book, The Struggle
for Recognition), precisely because it only deals in the broadest and most
abstract of ways with the question of what is valued in acts of recognition.
Recognition is too thin and unspecific a concept to get us very far in this
respect and there is more to the moral grammar and semantics of social
life and conflict than recognition. To understand the significance of both
distribution and recognition we have to consider what they enable and
what they are for.25
We need to consider the goods or valued ways of life for which people strive and for which they may also seek recognition. The struggles of
the social field are partly about what is worthy of pursuit and respect:
they are about what is needed to flourish and what deserves recognition.
Recognition is always of something, in virtue of something, and what
its for is what is most important. Moreover, there is a crucial asymmetry
between goods and recognition. While recognition is itself a good (since it
acknowledges individuals and groups rights and allows them to pursue
their conceptions of the good and gain self-respect), it is partly conditional
upon other goods: people also pursue activities, commitments and relationships regardless of whether they bring them recognition. In addition,
lack of necessary resources is itself a source of suffering, independently
of its association with lack of recognition: the homeless need a home as
25
For example, while recognition encourages confidence, confidence is not in itself a moral
quality; it may, for example, be falsely based, and confident people are not necessarily
morally good, or diffident people bad (Alexander and Lara, 1996).
68
shelter and not only for the recognition that it signals.26 An occupational
hazard of studying recognition itself, in abstraction from goods, is that it
is easy to forget or reverse this asymmetric relation, so that it seems that
what is good is simply whatever happens to bring recognition (ONeill,
1999). As I shall argue in later chapters, people do not just strive for
resources and recognition, they strive to flourish by living in ways they
have reason to value and this depends on more than either resources or
recognition.
Consequently, both interest-based struggle and the pursuit of recognition are related to the struggle for goods in the broad sense of ways of
living that people value. The pursuit of interests, if it is not misguided,
also involves the pursuit of goods, albeit often in a selfish way rather than
one that leaves enough and as good for others. Recognition of the particular goods that people achieve gives them self-esteem. In both cases
there is a basis in goods in things, practices and goals that are valued. Without this basis, recognition would be tokenistic and worthless
and interests would be delusory. This is not at all to foreclose the thorny
question of what are goods in this sense. On the contrary, the point of this
critique is to elevate the position of that very question in social science
and in public debate. It is important both from an external normative
view and for understanding actors own normative concerns. In chapter
5, as part of an analysis of the nature and structures of the struggles of
the social field, we will introduce some ways of conceptualising some of
the goods that people pursue and in virtue of which recognition is likely
to be granted.
I have argued that a different form of recognition is involved in the
politics of class than in identity politics and have attempted to analyse
what the former involves. The differences between them can be summarised by reference to their normative implications, as Diane Coole has
shown in an important article (Coole, 1996). She conceptualises class
as a type of structured economic inequality which often correlates with
cultural differences in values, perspectives, practices and self-identity but
which is not primarily produced by cultural distinctions (ibid., p. 17).27
Classes are not primarily life-forms requesting recognition as legitimate28
26
27
28
We do not need to go to the extreme of arguing that perceived disrespect is the motivational basis of all social conflicts (Honneth, 2003, p. 157, emphasis added). Some are
purely about getting more resources regardless of their implications for recognition.
This, pace Lawler (1999, p. 4), does not entail that class is not also figured in cultural or
symbolic terms.
Or as Nancy Fraser notes, The last thing the proletariat needs is recognition of its
difference. Nevertheless, my colleague Maureen McNeil reports that some students
think of class in these terms (personal communication).
69
(though demands for recognition of some aspects of particular class cultures might be made); they are not differences to be celebrated; they
cannot be reduced to their performances; they cannot be subverted by
parody; and, unlike gender, class does not need denaturalizing since
everyone agrees it is conventional (ibid., p. 23). These differences matter. However, some versions of the concept of class, including lay versions,
do include more cultural distinctions as partly constitutive of class and
not merely responsive to it. It is therefore necessary to confront the many
different meanings of class before we can proceed any further.
Introduction
The normative significance of class for actors depends partly on their
understanding of what determines class. Thus the evaluations that they
make of their class others and themselves are influenced by what they
assume to be the causes of class positions; in particular they involve assessments of whether people deserve their class position or are undeserving
beneficiaries or victims of it. For example, as Miche` le Lamont demonstrates, while US skilled working men tend to see class inequalities in
individualistic terms, as products of differences in effort and merit, their
French equivalents have a more politicised understanding of class as a
structure or set of forces positioning people (Lamont, 2000). As with any
kind of practical sense, lay understandings do not have to be consistent or
correct: people often waver between treating class differences as unfair or
fair, or deny that classes exist when their actions imply the opposite. We
therefore cannot simply reduce class to whatever actors imagine it to be,
for it may have effects on them that they do not register, including ones
that influence the positions from which they think about class. In subsequent chapters, like Bourdieu and other social theorists, I shall mostly
simply use the everyday descriptions working class or middle class for
locating actors, qualifying them where necessary. However, it is important to appreciate what lies behind those everyday terms, and for this
we need to turn to sociological theory, where we encounter more examined concepts of class. Popular ideas about the nature of class embrace
a chaotic mix of phenomena including not only occupation and wealth
but matters such as accent, language, taste and bearing that sociologists
would generally treat as secondary. They also tend to include inequalities
that many sociologists would see in terms of status rather than class. Since
lay understandings face social researchers both as an object of explanation (explanandum) and rival explanation (explanans), we need both to
understand lay concepts of class whether consistent or inconsistent
and to use a consistent set of sociological concepts to analyse them. If we
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71
72
73
This does not mean that they cannot work jointly with these other influences, only that
they are capable of working independently of them. The difference between contingent
and necessary relations is crucial in abstraction (Sayer, 1992).
Given these definitions of abstract and concrete, how realistic, truthful or practicallyadequate concepts are does not depend on whether they are abstract or concrete. The
real is fallibly construed both through abstract and concrete concepts. Hence, concrete
does not mean real. To talk of concrete reality on these definitions is to refer to manysided reality, not to add rhetorical weight to implicit claims to truth. Nor does abstract
correspond to academic or theoretical, for everyday language and concepts are also
abstract; indeed, the power of all language derives from its ability to abstract in ways that
can inform practice successfully: abstraction is eminently practical (Sayer, 1992, 2000a).
In this way, the Marxist concept of class is routinely thrown out because it fails to do
what it wasnt intended to do. This is not to deny that Marx and Marxists have often
also expected too much of the concept. While ownership and non-ownership of means of
production are still crucial to the functioning of capitalism there are many other influences
upon economic power and security.
74
gender and status. I shall argue that Bourdieus concept of class comes
close to doing this.
To explain the complexities of the concrete one has first to abstract its
various elements, analyse them, and then move back towards the concrete by recombining them, examining how they interact, often producing emergent properties irreducible to their constituents. In effect, this
is what Bourdieu attempts to do, by resolving the determinants of social
position into different kinds and volumes of capitals economic, social,
cultural, etc. and then explaining the specific combinations of these
held by actors in different parts of the social field, and the effects of those
combinations. However, where researchers lack time and are attracted by
the goal of explaining much by little, they may misguidedly seek to bypass this arduous analytical process and instead try to identify an abstract
concept which single-handedly will explain often in a merely statistical
sense the complexities of the concrete. This positivist approach mistakes
quantitative regularities for causal mechanisms and invites identification
errors misattributions of causal responsibility to just those variables that
have been selected (Sayer, 1992). Conversely, as we have seen, abstract
concepts of class that can only be expected to be selective in their scope
are often criticised and rejected for failing to explain the complexities of
the concrete.
A third requirement for clearing the ground is that we avoid the common tendency of overlooking the difference between academic, sociological concepts of class, and those implicit in lay, everyday understandings of
the social world. Again, the latter are both object and rival for the former.
Confusion may arise from the fact that in attempting to explain or interpret lay senses of class we may want to invoke different academic concepts
of class to explain them or certain elements of them; for this purpose it is
not necessary that the latter corresponds to the former (though confusingly we may use the same word for them). This is not only because the
academic concepts tend to be more examined, more abstract and hence
less ambiguous and diffuse, but because an explanans needs to be different from an explanandum. However, sometimes not only lay people
but academics feel that they should judge academic concepts according to
how they match everyday concepts. Lay concepts of class may themselves
fail to distinguish between different sources of inequality, for example,
between wealth and status. Lay thought also rarely acknowledges gender,
either as an influence upon life-chances as a whole or more specifically
as an influence upon economic capital, and gender is still fundamentally
naturalised in much lay thinking. Lay concepts differ from academic concepts of class in that, like any commonsense concepts, they are typically
unexamined and used in a wide variety of situations, so that their meaning
75
tends to shift without this being noticed. As Bourdieu would say, they are
governed by a practical logic rather than a logic of categories, statements
and relations of entailment; their development is driven by a pragmatic
feel for the game rather than the pursuit of conceptual consistency and
empirical corroboration. For these reasons, whatever the shortcomings
of academic concepts of class, it is misguided to object to them simply
because they differ from lay senses, though this kind of objection is common, as if lay senses were authoritative. While the unexamined nature of
lay concepts renders them problematic for use as an explanans, they are
of course part of the explananda of social science; indeed, in this case,
they are matters about which people care a great deal and are not merely
descriptive but constitutive of social life, and hence cannot be ignored.4
In this book I intend to take them seriously more seriously than much
social science has done but I want neither to dismiss nor to privilege
them a priori as explanations of social life.
Since sociological concepts of class can and should differ from lay
concepts, and since the latter are part of the object of study, we shall need
to use and refer to both kinds of concept. Hence, where the meaning is
not clear from the context I shall denote the sociological or academic
concept classS and the lay concept classL . Note, however, that this
does not necessarily correspond to the abstract/concrete distinction, for
some sociological concepts of class, such as Bourdieus, may be concrete
rather than abstract.
Fourthly, matters are further complicated by the fact that academic
concepts of class may filter into lay discourse, and affect how actors think
about it. This does not mean that actors will interpret them in exactly the
same way as academics. Although, if asked about class by social scientists,
they may try to answer in terms that they imagine will be acceptable to
their interviewers, they are also likely to appropriate academic concepts
in ways that fit with their understanding and interests, sometimes deliberately changing their meaning, as when bosses describe themselves as
working class because they work.
This highlights a fifth point, that concepts of class are likely to be
contested:
4
The rich diversity of contexts in which lay concepts are used has certain virtues which
academics tend to miss. Lay interpretations of behaviour and motives can be highly
skilled and subtle, compared to the lumbering efforts of academics, whose abstraction
from concrete contexts not only highlights particular things for analysis but carries the
occupational hazard of plunging others into darkness. While radical academic wariness of
commonsense is warranted, it often goes not only with an underestimation of its practical
efficacy but with a scarcely veiled form of class distinction, through which academics
assert their superiority over the vulgar masses. Radical academia is no less vulnerable to
forms of pretension than other kinds.
76
The word class will never be a neutral word as long as there are classes. The
question of the existence or non-existence of classes is a stake in the struggle
between the classes. (Bourdieu, 1993, p. 21)
Later I shall argue that this struggle is more than just a competition for
power but one influenced by various kinds and levels of awareness of the
ethically problematic nature of class.
Sixthly, to some extent discourses of class produce real effects. In recent
years, following the cultural turn in social theory, there has been increased
interest in cultural constructions of class, for example, in the history of
discourses of class (e.g., Day, 2001; Finch, 1993; Skeggs, 2004). These
contributions are important not only for understanding the subjective
experience of class: the ascriptions of value or lack of value to self and
other produce real effects on people in terms of how they are treated,
and hence on their life-chances. As a result of such work, we now have a
much richer understanding of cultural constructions of class. However,
there is a danger that it may be assumed that class is little more than a
product of such constructions. To be sure, discourses have real effects,
but rarely ones that are identical to those to which they refer. Identifying
discourses is not the same as identifying what they are about, or their
reception and effects. Discourses are usually performative to some degree,
but the extent to which they produce what they name is a matter for
empirical research, not a priori assumption. Careless, hyperbolic uses
in social theory of the metaphors of construction and constitution, in
ways that conceal their fallibility and limited effects, lead us to exaggerate
the power of representations.5
Having cleared the ground a little as regards the general nature of
concepts of class, I turn now to Bourdieus approach to the subject, as
one which is particularly appropriate for interpreting lay understandings
of class.
Bourdieus approach to class
I shall first draw attention to the strengths of this approach for understanding the subjective experience of class, and then identify some problems with it, albeit ones which can be rectified without abandoning it
altogether.
Bourdieu defines an objective class as:
the set of agents who are placed in homogeneous conditions of existence imposing
homogeneous conditionings and producing homogeneous systems of dispositions
capable of generating similar practices . . . (1984, p. 101)
5
As Skeggs notes, representations are not always taken up by the represented (2004,
p. 117).
77
(1) This definition of class, with its reference to correspondences between conditionings and dispositions, obviously complements
Bourdieus concepts of habitus and field, reflecting the fact that it is not
merely an ad hoc concept but part of a social meta-theory. Bourdieus
definition is relatively concrete compared to most sociological concepts
of class, yet flexible enough to identify class differences in more than one
dimension, hence enabling it to illuminate lay senses of class which tend
not to differentiate it from status. It embraces differences not only in
economic capital but in cultural, social, educational, linguistic and other
forms of capital too, so that classes or class fractions are differentiated
not only by their total amount of capital but by its composition.6 Class
differences are therefore understood as lying not on a single axis, but
on several, each relating to different forms of capital. Thus, for example, the dominant classes include both commercial fractions (strong in
economic rather than cultural capital) and professional fractions (strong
in cultural and educational capital and moderately strong in economic
capital). The inclusion of non-economic capitals allows Bourdieu to take
a more searching analysis of differentiations normally treated simply as
matters of status. He is therefore able to provide unparalleled insights
into symbolic domination, and hence into the subjective experience and
sense of class, which is always far more than an awareness of differences in material wealth. It therefore differs from social stratification
approaches to class, which are often little more than operational taxonomies for empirical research, weakly supported by a combination of
ad hoc references to various theoretical abstract concepts of class and
other variables (human capital, status, education, etc.), sometimes
coupled with appeals to supposed lay senses of class. Bourdieu does not
merely list and add up variables, and look for empirical regularities among
them, but theorises the character and tendencies of the constituent elements and how they interact. Thus, insofar as it is an unusually concrete concept of class, embracing many different elements, it is closer
than other sociological concepts to lay senses of class in all their complexity, though of course in abstracting and then recombining different
elements it provides a deep analysis of what is unexamined in everyday
life.
Bourdieus approach allows us to analyse the interactions between
sources of inequality relating to different types of capital. Usually, there is
a positive covariation between holdings of most of these forms of capital.
For example, although people with the same amount of economic capital
6
I have omitted symbolic capital, that is, capital of any kind which is recognised as legitimate, and have assumed that such recognition applies in some degree to all types of
capital.
78
may vary in the amount of cultural capital they have, cultural capital is
nevertheless generally positively associated with economic capital. There
are unlikely to be individuals or groups with very high cultural capital but
very low economic capital, though the lottery of economic markets may in
a few cases allow the reverse i.e., for individuals who lack non-economic
capital to enjoy monetary windfalls (the nouveau riche). While cultural
and other non-economic forms of capital can to a limited extent compensate for lack of economic capital, they can also be converted into it,
usually without loss.7 Conversely, a certain amount of economic capital is
necessary for acquiring many forms of cultural and other non-economic
capital. The degree of convertibility and hence the extent to which they
covary tends to be gendered. While the different kinds of capital tend to
be closely related for men, they are less so for women, for whom patriarchal constraints can easily prevent them converting their cultural and
educational capital into economic capital. Thus the new generation of
women graduates has not had the same success in developing careers as
male graduates. Those who have children and divorce are particularly
likely to experience difficulty in converting their cultural and educational
capital into economic capital.
Although, in a highly commodified society, not much can be done
without money, cultural and other non-economic forms of capital cannot themselves be directly bought, for they require processes of social
osmosis, embodiment, learning and self-change which can take considerable time generations in some cases. This relative durability of capital holdings particularly in the case of embodied capital means that
there is a great deal of path-dependence in the evolution of inequalities; yesterdays winners and losers tend to be tomorrows. For example,
outlay of money is only a necessary, not a sufficient, condition for gaining the know-how and feel for the game of high culture. This limitation
betrays the nouveau riche. Here, in the difficulty and slow rates of acquisition, we see another significant difference between economic and noneconomic capital. Whereas one can tell peoples origins by their accents,
demeanour, speech, etc., one cannot tell where money has been before;
it bears no traces of its origins and does not have to be embodied, as do
non-economic forms of capital. As Offe puts it, an essential feature of
markets is that they neutralise meaning as a criterion of production and
distribution (Offe, 1985, p. 82). However, money and markets do not
7
The fact that non-economic forms of capital (such as social or cultural capital) can be
deployed without depleting the stocks indeed they may be augmented through use
indicates a disanalogy with the more familiar economic capital. It also gives those with
more cultural and educational capital more security than those who lack these and have
only economic capital.
79
80
has its own hierarchies of institutions and its own competing valuations
of and struggles over different kinds of capital. The definition and pursuit of goods therefore take place according to contested criteria, which
reflect the different positions of the competing groups within their field.
This allows us to recognise that there is a social patterning to the valuations that actors make of themselves, others and goods, including the
valuations they make of people according to class.
(4) The theoretical framework of habitus and field enables us to see
that individuals sharing the same conditions may behave similarly even
in the absence of any recognition of collective identity or interests: an
objective class need not be a mobilised class. As Bourdieu argues, the
decline of class solidarity and the absence of mobilisation in no way imply
that class is disappearing. It therefore enables us to understand how lay
sensitivity to class difference persists despite the decline of class solidarity
and class-based political organisation. As Mike Savage argues:
What Bourdieus arguments point towards is the need to consider the nature of
contemporary identities in ways which are not premised on simplistic contrasts
between either class collectivism on the one hand, or individualized identities on
the other, but which are attentive to their intermeshing. (Savage, 2000, p. 108)9
(5) Bourdieus definition of objective class cited above does not require
the definition of sharp boundaries between classes. Differences in volumes of capital holdings generally form continua rather than steps,
though processes of exclusion, and the bestowal of credentials by educational and professional institutions, can in many cases produce steep
gradients of holdings between groups, thereby making some boundaries
relatively clear. Since class boundaries are themselves contested in the
very reproduction of class, their identification is a matter for empirical
research rather than prior decision. In this way, Bourdieu is able to avoid
sterile debates over where to draw class boundaries and where to locate
particular groups on a single dimension.
(6) Unlike most social stratification approaches which posit classes in
mainly non-relational terms and only contingently in antagonism or competition, Bourdieu conceptualises them in strongly relational terms, not
so much in terms of exploitation, as in the Marxist concept of class, but in
terms of a dialectic of competition, distinction and differentiation which
is central to symbolic domination. Economically, members of different
occupations such as accountants and teachers are only indirectly interdependent through the division of labour, but symbolically they not only
9
The targets of Savages criticism are the claims about individualisation made by authors
such as Beck and Beck-Gernsheim (2002) and Giddens (1991).
81
Later I shall argue that Bourdieus view of the processes of differentiation and competitive struggle is too Hobbesian and fails to do justice to
its normative, including its ethical, aspects, but at this stage I want to
focus on two different problems with his concept of objective class, one
concerning gender and the other the origins of economic capital.
Objective class and gender
To repeat, for Bourdieu, an objective class is the set of agents who are
placed in homogeneous conditions of existence imposing homogeneous
conditionings and producing homogeneous systems of dispositions capable of generating similar practices . . . (Bourdieu, 1984, p. 101). At first
sight, one might be tempted to protest that such a definition could be
as much about gender as class, or indeed about ethnicity, for it fails
to say how class differs from gender and other sources of inequality.10
10
Elsewhere he writes: [A] class [in a sense consciously used by actors], be it social,
sexual, ethnic or otherwise . . . (Bourdieu, 1987, p. 15, emphasis added). This usage
reinforces the impression that for Bourdieu, class means just social position, and is not
related to narrower senses of class which tie it to economic capital, or distinguish it
from gender.
82
Gender and ethnicity are therefore treated as elements which, with others,
co-determine class. This would imply that, thanks to gender differences,
men and women must always occupy different classes. While this would
be a consistent use of the definition, the danger is that, while claiming
to take gender into account, it invites us to overlook it or reduce it to a
modifier of class in the more restricted, abstract sense which relates it to
economic capital, so that its distinctive character is overlooked. The supposedly universal descriptor actually tends to marginalise what it claims
to include. In Bourdieus analyses, the logic of class and status is given the
dominant, contextualising role, with gender as modifier. The dominant
oppositions of symbolic domination are taken to be those of high/low,
refined/coarse, rather than those of gender (male/female, public/private,
hard/soft, etc.). Only in his Masculine Domination does gender escape
a secondary role to be treated as an axis of inequality in its own right
(Bourdieu, 2001). Gender, ethnicity and other kinds of social division
have different bases from those of economic classS in the narrow sense.
To ignore these differences and treat each kind of division and group
as reducible to particular combinations of various forms of capital is to
obscure their most important and distinctive properties. Certainly, men
and women do tend to have different volumes and mixes of capital, but
this says nothing about the mechanisms to do with gender which make
them different. Gender and class (in both a narrow and the broad sense)
are not merely modifiers of each other but axes of social differentiation
and inequality in their own right.
I therefore suggest we rename Bourdieus concept of objective class
simply objective social position, thereby retaining the strengths noted
above while removing the awkward semantic tension with more restricted
concepts of classS , and making it clearer that we need to explicitly include
gender as well among its prime determinants. Thus, adopting an abstract
83
concept of classS need not mean that gender is excluded from consideration among the determinants of objective social position; on the contrary,
it leaves space for it instead of attempting to subsume it in a way that risks
burying its distinctive features. This still allows us to take account of how
these objective positions are associated with different amounts and combinations of various forms of capital, but without inviting the misapprehension that these are all to do with class in the abstract sense. Gender and
class thus defined combine in various ways to influence objective social
position and life-chances. The combinations are not merely additive.
They may involve reinforcement, neutralisation or dissonance, or they
may yield emergent properties. In analysing the concrete we therefore
have to examine the manner and products of the interaction of elements
previously analysed through abstraction. In this alternative approach, the
struggles of the social field involve cross-cutting struggles of class, gender,
and others such as age, ethnicity and sexuality.
Gender orders give rise to their own distinctive forms of capital. As
Leslie McCall (1992) argues, gender can be not merely a secondary modifier of cultural, social and educational capital but a source of capital
masculine or feminine in its own right.11 As with other forms of capital,
the value of masculine and feminine capital varies according to the particular field in which its holders find themselves. Middle class masculinity
may be disparaged in a working class context, and vice versa, and equivalently with middle and working class forms of femininity. Masculine
and feminine capital are strongly embodied and evident in appearance,
demeanour, comportment and behaviour. Insofar as femininity and masculinity depend on socially valued inherited bodily characteristics such
as size and shape which are difficult to alter or disguise, as opposed to
more easily socially acquired ones, then as forms of capital they tend to
cut across the others. Size and body shape vary to some extent with economic capital, but there is of course a great deal of variation around such
averages, and the working class boy or girl who has the valued body shape
and size has more opportunities for upward mobility than those who do
not. Bodily features therefore function as a wild card in the struggles of the
social field, offering possibilities for upward (and downward) mobility.12
To the extent that bodies and appearances can indeed be shaped, they
can be the subjects of investments in masculine or feminine capital.
11
12
As McCall shows, Bourdieus position on this seems to have varied between these two
positions. Heterosexuality could also arguably be regarded as a source of capital, albeit
one that is beginning to be contested.
Thus, in part, gendered capital involves a valuation of nature; like any valuation, it is
made according to social criteria, but it is about something that is partly beyond social
construction. On the ambiguities of social construction, see Sayer, 2000a, chapter 4.
84
Masculinity and femininity are only conventionally associated with biological sex, and on appropriate occasions (whose determination again
varies by class) feminine characteristics may be acceptable for men and
masculine characteristics for women usually on the proviso that outside these occasions they revert to expected type.13 Gender norms are
in varying degrees contested, particularly in groups with high cultural
and economic capital. Conversely, as Beverley Skeggs shows, femininity may be the only source of capital to which working class women
have access and hence they are likely to be sceptical of feminism to the
extent to that it threatens the profits of femininity (Skeggs, 1997; see also
Lovell, 2000).
13
For example, a woman like Ellen MacArthur, who shows great bravery, toughness and
technical skill in the conventionally masculine sport of sailing, is expected to be sufficiently feminine when off duty; indeed, it seems as if the latter is a condition for unqualified celebration of her exceptional qualities. The same applies to strong women in
politics.
85
I do not simply term the latter discriminatory because some forms of discrimination
are not in response to identities, but to other qualities, e.g., discrimination according to
price.
86
To elaborate: I did not include these in the elements of economic capital because none
of them constitute necessary conditions for the existence of economic capital, though
on occasion they may be sufficient but unnecessary conditions. Putting it the other way
round, economic capital based on ownership and non-ownership, division of labour,
inheritance, do not require status, gender or ethnic differences and the like as conditions
of their existence. On this mode of abstraction, see Sayer, 2000a and b.
87
This is surely correct economic inequalities are structured by noneconomic, cultural mechanisms but the also is important too, if, that
is, it is meant to imply that there are, in addition, some influences which are
indeed determined by economic processes regardless of gender, ethnicity
or status. To understand in what respects inequalities are necessary for
capitalism to function we would need to distinguish whether the relations
between these different mechanisms producing inequality are contingent
or necessary.
More specifically we need to recognise the contingent co-presence
of identity-neutral and identity-sensitive mechanisms in determining
inequalities. One of the great disappointments of the last two decades of
research on inequality has been a tendency to invert the former neglect
of identity-sensitive, cultural influences by denying the co-presence of
identity-neutral mechanisms (Sayer, 2000b; see also Holmwood, 2001
and Sayer, 2002a). In the process certain essential features of the operation of capitalist economies which can have major effects on peoples
life-chances and experience, regardless of their identity, are in danger of
being lost to view. Just because economic relations are always socially
embedded which in our society inevitably means in ways that are gendered, raced, etc. it does not follow that identity-neutral dimensions
are not also present, any more than the fact that birds can fly means that
gravity is suspended.
While the concrete forms of capitalism are contingently influenced by
and responsive to misrecognition or discrimination according to identity, capitalism as an economic system is not dependent on these there
is no reason why it could not exist without them, and capitalism both
produces and depends on inequalities in the distribution of economic
capital regardless of these identity-sensitive processes. Whether people
find, retain or lose their jobs as wage-labourers and members of particular occupations or succeed or fail as capitalists depends on (among
other things) whether there is a market demand for whatever commodities material or non-material they produce. When consumers switch
from buying typewriters to word processors the fortunes of the respective workers producing those goods are likely to diverge, as jobs are lost
in the former sector and added in the latter. Further, some new people
may be able to become capitalists in the expanding sector. The resulting
changes in inequalities are not the product of discrimination by consumers according to the identities of the workers producing those goods,
for consumers are likely to be ignorant of or indifferent to their identities.
Similarly, de-industrialisation results primarily from the uneven rate of
productivity growth in manufacturing and service sectors and produces
88
Judith Butlers claims about the relationships between capitalism and sexuality, ably
rebutted by Fraser, are an example of this kind of illogic (Butler, 1997; Fraser, 1998).
The irony is that ultra-leftism was notable for its dismissive attitude to non-capitalist
causes of inequality and oppression.
89
19
20
I recognise that a low class position can compound disadvantages of gender and race
or ethnicity, and add to stigmatisation of such identities, but the relation is contingent:
low class positions could exist in their absence.
. . . the economic logic of markets interacts in complex ways with the cultural logic
of recognition, sometimes instrumentalizing existing status distinctions, sometimes dissolving or circumventing them, and sometimes creating new ones. As a result, market
mechanisms give rise to economic class relations that are not mere reflections of status
hierarchies (Fraser, 2003, p. 214).
The market thrives on inequality of income and wealth, but it does not recognize ranks.
It devalues all vehicles of inequality but the price tags (Bauman, 2001, p. 21).
90
and exploitable, they could not survive. However, note, first, that what is
essential for their survival as marginal capitalist firms is cheap, exploitable
labour not necessarily cheap labour of this particular gender or ethnicity: any group which happens to be available and is willing to do the work
for equally low pay would do. Secondly, this cheap, exploitable labourpower may be a condition of the existence of these particular firms, but it is
not a condition of the existence of capitalism. Capitals have to compete
but there are many other ways of competing besides driving down the
labour cost:output ratio there are also automation, upskilling, product innovation, reducing material costs and overheads, to name a few.
Capitalism, as such, therefore, does not depend on employing workers
from particular gender or ethnic groups.
Capital also certainly needs its labour force to be reproduced if it is to
survive, but it does not need its labour force to be predominantly male or
domestic work to be done primarily by women. Anyone who can do these
kinds of work will do, and men and women can do both. Moreover, as
Sylvia Walby has argued (1986, 1990), although most capitalists are also
men, patriarchal interests may often be at odds with capitalist interests.
Capitalism and patriarchy or gender orders are two systems which, being
both pervasive, have had to adjust to each other, though they could exist
independently of each other; patriarchy has existed in non-capitalist systems, and no-one has ever demonstrated why capital accumulation, class,
money, or competition among capitals could not exist without patriarchy.
Hence, while they are everywhere in interaction, their interdependence
is only contingent.21
Identity-sensitive, identity-constructing mechanisms are an important
source of inequalities, both in their own right and in interaction with
identity-indifferent ones. The economic capital, security or vulnerability
of many workers has a great deal to do with their particular identity.
Those who are excluded from the labour market through sexism or racism
and the like suffer from economic disadvantages which are ultimately
cultural in origin, involving symbolic domination, including discourses
of sexism, racism and homophobia. With respect to their gender men
and women experience what we might call first-order moral judgements
and taken-for-granted assumptions regarding them as men and women
e.g., as good girls or boys, mothers or fathers and different standards
(i.e., double standards) are a prime force in the (re)production of gender
differences and relations. They are cultural in the sense that they are
constructed on the basis of cultural understandings of men and women
21
Once again, refusal to use abstraction or distinguish between contingent and necessary
relations between can and must is a recipe for misunderstanding.
91
and what should be expected of them. But they are also economic insofar
as those constructions of gender assume particular economic roles for
men and women, such as breadwinner or caregiver, whether work is to
be paid or unpaid, and how work is valued in terms of recognition of skills
and rewards.
Thus, the practice of actual organisations typically (but contingently) involves both identity-sensitive or -constructing mechanisms and
identity-indifferent mechanisms. (Note that we are moving up to a more
concrete level of analysis here, from particular mechanisms, to the manner of their combination in particular circumstances.) Giving certain jobs
to people on the basis of gender identity and appearance, for example the
customer relations job to an attractive woman, certainly indicates sensitivity to identity, but in the context of an organisation involved in economic
systems, such as a bank, this is a process of selection oriented towards
these cultural differentiations, albeit, in many cases, for reasons to do with
identity-neutral mechanisms, particularly maximising profit. The decline
of manufacturing employment in most industrialised countries was not a
response to gender but it certainly impacted on the gendering of labour
markets, for the over-representation of men in manufacturing jobs meant
that many working class mens economic capital declined significantly,
with major implications for working class culture. The expansion in the
employment of women in Britain in the last two decades is a product
of a combination of identity-neutral mechanisms, such as changes in the
relative profitability of sectors in which women were already under- or
over-represented, and identity-sensitive mechanisms, such as the beginnings of a feminisation of education and political culture.
The partial autonomy of market systems from the identity of those
involved in them also provides an important reason for retaining an
abstract structural concept of economic class as product of those systems, in addition to more concrete concepts of class such as those of
Bourdieu, or indeed lay actors. This still allows us to acknowledge that,
at the level of the concrete, the way in which classL behaviour and identities develop is always in and through gender, ethnicity, age and sexuality.
There are therefore significant differences between working class cultures
of men and of women, of black and of white, and so on (Skeggs, 1997,
2004), and the same goes for higher classes. However, as we have seen,
our economic capital can change for reasons that have nothing to do
with our identity or behaviour, as well as for reasons that do.22 Note also
22
92
that the distinction between identity-neutral and identity-sensitive mechanisms does not correspond simply to economic and non-economic, for
the identity-sensitive processes also influence economic capital, for example, gendered assumptions regarding men and womens economic roles.23
This insistence on the contingent nature of the interaction between
class and gender and race goes against the grain of many contemporary
cultural analyses of class; for example, Gary Day writes: Ultimately, of
course, race, gender, sexuality and culture cannot be separated from class
(Day, 2001, p. 200). This seems correct as regards behaviour: how could
one, for example, clearly distinguish which aspects of the behaviour of
male professionals or female cleaners derive from their class and which
from their gender? But it would be a mistake to suppose that class could
not possibly exist without gender (or race or other social divisions) and
vice versa. Moreover, as we have seen, the origins or causes of class and
gender differences are radically different. Even associations which appear
to be universal may be contingent. One of the roles of theory is to grasp
the necessary conditions of existence of objects, as distinct from their
contingent associations. When confronted with associations between x
and y, we need to ask counterfactual questions of the form: could x exist
without y, and vice versa?; what difference would the absence of y make?
In answering them we learn about their conditions of existence.24
By asking the same kinds of theoretical question, we can adduce that
the subjective experience of class is not a necessary condition of the
(re)production of economic classS in capitalism (though it contingently
affects its course). By contrast, subjective experience and identities are
necessarily constitutive of gender because gender differences are ascriptive in character.
In emphasising that some of the key mechanisms that generate inequalities in holdings of economic capital are indifferent to identities, I am
countering a kind of vulgar culturalism or culturalist imperialism which
assumes ascriptive, cultural definitions go all the way down, so that, for
example, poverty is ultimately a product of a culture of poverty. As long as
23
24
A further distinction might be introduced between the formal capitalist economy itself
and the informal non-capitalist economies, most importantly of the household, with
which it articulates.
John Frow objects: The very act of listing the factors that make up social positionalities (age+gender+race+sexual orientation+ . . .) assumes, as Judith Butler puts it,
their discrete, sequential coexistence along a horizontal axis that does not describe
their convergences within a social field (1995, p. 102). They do indeed converge and
interact but it does not follow from this that they cannot exist independently of one
another. The task of abstract theory is to assess whether their relationship is contingent
or necessary through abstraction, and to define their conditions of existence, structure
and powers. The task of concrete analysis is to examine how they contingently interact,
possibly producing emergent effects (Sayer, 2000a and b).
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the identity-neutral processes of capitalism continue unchecked, changing how we treat people of other classes will make only small differences.
Contrary to the impression given by social constructionist accounts of
class, which blur the difference between concepts of class and what they
are about, thereby rendering the former voluntaristically performative,
people are not simply members of this or that class because of how others define their class and behave towards them, though these do have
some effects. It should also be noted, incidentally, that while ignoring
culturally generated problems many of them economic is far from
progressive, nor is the converse tendency of neglecting identity-neutral
sources of problems, or reducing the latter to the former. The British government (and many others) prefers to treat unemployment as a problem
of the identity of individuals who are unemployed and their inability to
make themselves marketable, rather than of the inability of the economic
system to provide sufficient employment. This concealment of identityneutral influences upon economic processes and economic class is a form
of mystification. As we shall see in the following chapters it is also common in lay views of class and helps to legitimise class differences.
Conclusions and implications
Though peoples class antennae their practical sense of class are usually highly sensitive to social differences, their discursive consciousness
of class is generally less well defined, conflating inequalities of different
kinds and origins.25 If we are to make sense of the lay experience of class
and assess its adequacy we need to identify its various components and
how it differs from other sources of inequality, as well as how it interacts
with them.
If by class we mean an abstract concept of economic class which ties
it to identity-neutral mechanisms then it cannot be said to be a product of misrecognition or symbolic violence, though it tends to stimulate these. If we use a more inclusive, concrete, concept of class such as
that of Bourdieu or common lay senses, which already subsume identitysensitive mechanisms, then of course it has to be acknowledged that class
in this sense is partly a product of (mis)recognition. Although class in
the abstract economic sense is itself normally produced partly regardless of identity and (mis)recognition, it is, of course, like gender, hugely
important for forming subjective identities and the habitus (Charlesworth,
2000): class is certainly a cause of misrecognition, in the sense used in
25
It is not unusual for our feel for a game to be highly proficient while our attempts to
represent it discursively falter.
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Introduction
Class inequalities involve not merely differences in wealth, income and
economic security, but differences in access to valued circumstances,
practices and ways of life goods in a broad sense and in the recognition or valuation of those goods and their holders. They produce and are
shaped by struggles and competition, domination and resistance, as well
as compliance, whether willing or reluctant. What is the nature of these
struggles? What are they about? What are the goods that are being struggled for? What is the relation between the valuation of particular goods
and the social position of the groups with which they are associated?
The purpose of this chapter is to answer these questions. As we noted in
chapter 1, lay moral sentiments and norms regarding how people should
treat one another and how different behaviours should be evaluated imply
assumptions about the nature of goods and the good life. We will deal
with the latter first, moving on to moral sentiments and evaluations of
behaviour in subsequent chapters.
I shall begin with the general nature of the struggles in question, what
they are over, for and about, and what broad forms they take. To what
extent are they instrumental struggles for power per se, or struggles over
access to valued ways of life? To what extent do they involve contestation
of the definition and evaluation of goods or competition for goods whose
value is agreed upon but which are unequally distributed? We then examine the nature of goods themselves, distinguishing between those which
are seen as valuable in themselves, and those which are valuable primarily for advantages which they bring their holders vis-`a-vis others. More
specifically, I argue that the distinctions between use-value and exchangevalue and internal and external goods bring into view the respects in which
the inequalities and struggles of the social field go beyond the pursuit of
interests and power. This affords a far richer understanding of struggles
for goods and recognition. As we shall see, these distinctions are of considerable normative significance but are elided in Bourdieus concept of
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96
In terms of the philosophical distinction between the right and the good, the micropolitical struggles are primarily about the good, struggles over rights being more a feature
of organised, macro-politics.
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As before, in practice, judgement may be too strong and rationalist a term for a process
of selection and semi-conscious evaluation strongly influenced by the habitus.
This need not imply that inequality is unavoidable, for the competitive games are not
natural fixtures but contingent social products capable of being changed.
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99
violence and domination implies injustice, the struggles are not represented in much of his early work as being about justice, even from the side
of the dominated, but as a neutral competition for capital, with winners
and losers, albeit a competition which is played on a sloping field, and
in which yesterdays winners and losers are likely to be tomorrows. To
understand inequalities, domination, competition and resistance we need
to examine why they should matter to actors.
This might seem unfair as Bourdieu stresses the desire of the dominant
to secure not merely power but legitimacy, but then he avoids any discussion of whether any such struggles for legitimacy are themselves legitimate, leaving the impression that this is merely a way of further increasing
their power. In crypto-normative style, it is implied that the legitimacy
is questionable, but no direct argument is presented as to why it might
be. The views of the dominated about the legitimacy of their domination
are treated largely in terms of their effects for example, regarding the
way in which rejections of authority by the dominated have the effect of
legitimising the dominants worst feelings about them and justifying their
social exclusion. This leaves the actors normative grounds for the resistance unclear. Without knowing these we cannot assess whether it was
justified and we cannot justify judging the negative judgements of the
dominant as wrong. (That many would see such judgements as outside
the scope of social science does not alter the fact that we cannot justify
using terms like domination and symbolic violence without explaining in what respects the social relations involved are bad.4 ) Logically, we
could react to the references to domination by saying, Yes, why not?
whats wrong with domination? That few readers are likely to respond
in this way reflects the fact that in such cases description and evaluation
are inseparable.
The oppressed people interviewed in The Weight of the World (Bourdieu
et al., 1999) had a great deal to say about the legitimacy of their situations and the dominant discourses about them and they offered reasons
for their evaluations. These were not necessarily complete or particularly coherent but they indicate something that can easily be forgotten
in using concepts like habitus and feel for the game: that people are
evaluative beings; that what befalls them matters deeply to them; and that
they cannot develop a comfortable or contented feel for just any game,
or accept just any rationale, or submit to just any interpellation. No
struggle is reducible to striving for power or advantage, because power
or advantage can only exist in relation to goods, that is, valued things,
practices and ways of life. Having a monopoly of something which is
4
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a matter of indifference to others does not give you power over them.
The dominant claim that their goods are superior to others both (1) for
non-instrumental reasons because they believe (often rightly) it to be the
case and (2) for instrumental reasons because the more these goods
are desired by others the greater the profit that the dominant can derive
from monopolising them; it is in their interest to universalise their goals
without universalising the conditions for their achievement.
At one level, Bourdieu recognises this in emphasising how the struggles
of the social field are not only for goods but over the very definition of
what counts as a good, thereby emphasising the symbolic aspect of the
struggles. But this latter dimension also tends to be seen in Hobbesian
and instrumental terms whatever definition of the good best fits with the
habitus of a particular social group, or whatever best increases the value of
its capital (explanation 2 above), will be struggled for. The amoral analogy
of the game, with its stakes, encourages us to think of the contestation
of goods as mere power-play. This conceals the fact that while it is indeed
possible for groups to do this, they also struggle for things which they
value for their own sake, regardless of whether they bring them advantage
vis-`a-vis others. Egalitarian dispositions and strivings are defined out of
the picture by the amoral Hobbesian framework. If the dominated resist it
is implicitly only because they too want to be dominant, not because they
want equality and an end to domination. Similarly, the advantaged can
only want to maintain or augment their advantage; no advantaged person or group could possibly want their advantages to be shared equally.
Unless we acknowledge their moral-political content, we will fatally misunderstand the nature and normative significance of the struggles of the
social field. Thus the micro-politics of the social field include patriarchal, feminist, conservative, socialist, racist, anti-racist and many other
elements, none of which are merely instrumental. These alternative orientations are not stakes in the competition but normative agendas in their
own right. They are not merely about getting to the top of the pile but
about changing the nature of the social order.
Bourdieu tends to acknowledge these as only occurring exceptionally,
through politicisation leading to the de-naturalising of social determinations, and argues that otherwise the struggles of the social field will be
limited to competitive struggle, that is . . . the form of class struggle
which the dominated classes allow to be imposed on them when they
accept the stakes offered by the dominant classes . . . [and] . . . implicitly recognize the legitimacy of the goals pursued by those whom they
pursue . . . (Bourdieu, 1984, p. 165). They therefore struggle for position, but not to change the nature and structure of positions themselves.
One of the effects of the reduction of normativity to the struggle for
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power is that Bourdieu does not consider the possibility that the goals
pursued by the dominant might be legitimate, so that the dominated are
not misguided in also pursuing them.
Arguments can be conducted in order to find the truth (or at least to
find out what seems to be the case, or for the best, beyond self-interest).
Alternatively, they may be conducted in order to gain victory over
others (eristic arguments), in which case any means will do. Attempts
to persuade others of the superiority of certain values and practices generally face others who have not only different beliefs and dispositions,
but interests dependent on the practices or situations which are being
opposed, and who will therefore be inclined to treat the matter not as
one of accepting the force of the better argument but of using any means
to win. Any argument against sexism faces this problem, for example.
Bourdieu would no doubt have had reservations about this description
of social interaction as if it were an ongoing, grand, dispassionate public
seminar, but ordinary conversations including internal ones occur
about such matters and can involve this tension between instrumental
and non-instrumental, moral-political criteria.
These tensions between interest and reason or ethics raise problems
similar to those experienced by oppositional groups in far-left politics in
the 1970s, regarding whether to emphasise seizing power or persuading
people of the need for change. Too much emphasis on the former led to
corruption, self-repression and loss of sense of purpose, while emphasis
on the latter was naive in overestimating the impact of speaking truth to
power; socialists, feminists, greens and so on may win arguments but still
fail to make much impact against established interests.
The micro-politics of everyday life involve not only the pursuit of capital
but the search for the good life. They are not necessarily merely differences between people with different interests and with self-serving rationalisations of those interests. In a modern plural society, there are many
competing value systems, some of which may be internalised as divided
habitus, and it need not take a political education to confront them. The
elderly woman who was a full-time housewife, and invested heavily in that
identity, is faced with the contrast with her employed daughters lifestyle,
which incorporates greater autonomy, more involvement in public life,
a relative devaluation of domesticity, and different expectations of men.
Mother and daughter might each wonder about the pros and cons of
these ways of life, and how their own lives might have been different if
they were of a different age. (Neither might think of feminism as such but
both might reflect on issues that have very much to do with feminism.)
Insofar as the mother comes to accept and value her daughters way of
life, she can hardly avoid devaluing her own lifelong investments. But
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unlike mere financial investments they concern her whole being in terms
of her commitments and character. Similarly, in The Weight of the World,
Bourdieu et al. provide an excellent analysis of the dilemmas of elderly
farmers facing the combined loss of economic capital consequent upon
the decline of small farming and the loss of recognition of their way of
life, which is only too apparent in their sons wish not to inherit their
farms. While such crises certainly involve a devaluation of actors capital,
they are also about what constitutes a valuable life (Bourdieu et al., 1999,
pp. 38191 and 50713).
Difference and conformity
Given that inequalities operate on several axes and involve several different kinds of capital, the struggles of the social field are not reducible to
competition for the same goods but are also over how goods should be
valued. Nevertheless, as we saw in chapter 4, the relations between different forms of capital are not random; there is a partial co-variation of
different forms of capital, and the relations between them differentiate the
social field. The struggles are characterised by a tension between striving
for difference so as to be different-but-equal by pursuing different goods
from those valued by the dominant, and striving for advantage on terms
set by the dominant, by pursuing the same goods that they value.5 They
are not merely about access to goods but about distinction from others;
they involve struggles not only to be included but to exclude others. Many
groups outside the most dominant attempt to do both, though in different
proportions. Some are more conformist than others. The space of possibilities in this choice is limited. If those in subordinate positions rely too
heavily on competing on the terms of the dominant, both economically
and symbolically, by striving for more of what the dominant currently
monopolise and value, the odds are stacked against them. The dominant
are likely to resist any potential devaluation of their capital by restricting
access to it or by switching to more exclusive goods. The subordinate
who compete in this way also forgo the small but significant opportunities for degrees of autonomy from the pressures to accept the terms set by
the dominant. On the other hand, the risks of relying too much on striving for difference are that this may lead to self-exclusion from the goods
enjoyed by the dominant (which are unlikely to be mostly illusory) and
invite the dominant to disparage the alternative goods and marginalise
5
There are parallels here with the sameness/difference debate in feminism and with
Elizabeth Grosss argument for feminists to pursue autonomy rather than equality, given
the dangers of the latter being geared to male expectations (Gross, 1986).
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One ethical implication of this tendency for difference to be limited in societies based on
inequality and domination is that a significant reduction of domination and inequality
should allow an increase rather than a decrease in diversity, since there would be no
dominant class to feel threatened by challenges to its norms. This reinforces Tawneys
arguments against those who imagine that an egalitarian society would lack diversity.
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on what the practices involved are like, and the same goes for conformity.
We therefore need to return to the matter of the evaluation of goods,
including valued practices and ways of life which is itself central to the
struggles of the social field. It is not merely an academic matter but one
which is relevant to peoples well-being, and therefore contributes to the
moral significance of class.
People may regard others conceptions of the good be they conventional or unconventional with indifference or with a mixture of alarm
and contempt. The latter may derive from an unexamined fear of difference, in the shape of ills such as class contempt, racism or homophobia,
but it may alternatively derive from a more examined (if not necessarily justifiable) fear of particular ideas, behaviours and ways of life which
are felt to be dangerous and unethical for all. Some differences may be
mutually inconsistent or exclusive. Ethical norms such as those regarding treatment of animals are inherently universal in their claims, rather
than matters of individual or group preference. Many goods are common
rather than individual, not only by virtue of those respects in which people are similar, but through the interdependence of all groups, at least
through participation in the social division of labour. Such similarities
and interdependences imply that the struggles of the social field will pull
towards scenario A. To the extent that there is a common culture and to
the extent that even members of different cultures are part of the same
social division of labour, the tendency to pursue the same goods as others
is bound to be strong.
Thus far we have outlined some of the key structures of the competitions or struggles of the social field from a largely strategic point of
view. In effect, we have elaborated what is implicit in Bourdieus analysis,
but gone beyond it a little by beginning to counter his predominantly
Hobbesian view, by recognising that actors do not merely strive for what
is instrumentally advantageous, but for what they consider to be good.
But there is still far to go in escaping the Hobbesian framework by exploring the normative content of the struggles of the social field. It is to this
task that we now turn through an analysis of goods.
The nature of goods
We have used the term goods in a very broad sense to include not only
consumption goods but all those things which are valued, be they institutions, milieus, circumstances (such as good health and security), or
valued practices, relationships and ways of living. If we are to understand
the significance of social inequalities and the struggles of the social field
we need to analyse their normative implications further. In this section I
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I am indebted to John Baker for suggesting this way of framing the discussion.
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107
as probably the most prophetic pointer ever made in the history of the
social sciences (Polanyi, 1944 [1957], p. 53; see also Booth, 1993).
It anticipated the shift later summarised in Marxs notation as a move
from C-M-C (the sale of commodities for money in order to buy commodities) to M-C-M (the advancement of money capital to produce
commodities for sale in order to make a profit) (Marx, 1867:1976).
With the rise of capitalism, what was merely an incidental aberration
or vice in Aristotles time the direction of economic activity towards
the accumulation of money becomes an imperative (Booth, 1993).
Marx used the use-value/exchange-value distinction to distinguish capital
from mere machines, materials or buildings. The latter have use-value,
but only become capital when they are acquired in order to command
the labour of others and to earn exchange-value.10 If we apply this to
Bourdieus non-economic forms of capital, we can see that, in effect,
it is the exchange-value or symbolic profits that they bring which are
primary.
It is hardly surprising that in a capitalist society, not only the production of goods but their use should come to function as a means to
the acquisition of an abstract, convertible form of social power though
not necessarily intentionally. Further, as Bourdieu argues, competition
for exchange-value and its symbolic equivalents extends to phenomena
such as culture, education and social relations. Apparently disinterested
actions such as socialising, expressing tastes, or learning can affect individuals social, cultural and educational capital. They can all function as
forms of capital and bring their possessors various forms of advantage.
They have exchange-value, though the rates of exchange between the
various forms of capital are always contested through the struggles of the
social field. They can yield profits, and generate soft forms of domination.
Thus cultural capital can be signalled not only by formal representations
such as an arts degree, but by subtle indications of social location a certain bearing and social ease, an assured, relaxed command of appropriate
cultural goods which bring the holder advantages, whether intended or
not. Actors can enhance their social capital by developing networks of
contacts that are useful both practically and in terms of reputation. They
may be able to transform these forms of capital into others, including
economic capital. Note that actors do not necessarily intend to defend or
10
Ironically, Bourdieu does offer an explicitly Marxist definition of his forms of capital as
accumulated labour (in its materialized, or its incorporated, embodied form), which
when appropriated on a private, i.e. exclusive, basis by agents or groups of agents, enables
them to appropriate social energy in the form of reified or living labour (1984, p. 241).
However, he fails to take note of Marxs connection to the use-value/exchange-value
distinction.
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Some use-values are positional too. As road congestion becomes serious, the use-value
of cars declines with the number of people using them.
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110
That many people know that it is purely tokenistic does not excuse it. Many do not
and are fooled by it. Those who excuse it in this way would presumably object to other
universities doing the same thing.
111
of their qualities, whereas the exchange-value of capital can be influenced by irrelevant associations. Bourdieus reluctance to acknowledge
disinterested judgement restricts him to exchange-value, but his apparent critical intentions imply the need for references to use or intrinsic
value. In refusing this, he weakens his own critique. Moreover, in view of
Bourdieus enthusiasm for market economy concepts, we might note how
this is complicit with the tendency, noted by Rousseau, Smith and Marx,
for identity in commercial society to become a matter of appearance which
is divorced from the qualities a person actually has, a complicity shared
by postmodernism (ONeill, 1999).
A critical analysis of material inequality and symbolic domination cannot evade judgements of the use-value or intrinsic quality of the goods
associated with the various kinds of capital, such as the quality or usevalue of learning in educational capital. It has to distinguish between
deserved and undeserved recognition or misrecognition. Of course, any
attempt to make such a distinction is likely to invite suspicion that one is
trying to establish an authoritative, indeed authoritarian, basis for judgement, an absolute set of values. However, I fully accept that judgements of
(use-)value are contestable. But this does not mean either that all claims
to recognition are of equal merit, or disqualified by being associated with
particular social positions, or that there must always be some ulterior
motive behind the judgements and contestations such that critical distinctions can never be rationally justified. A critical theory that evades
normative judgements is a contradiction.
Internal and external goods
While adding the distinction between use-value and exchange-value to
Bourdieus economic metaphors of capital and symbolic profit is useful,
we can further illuminate the struggles of the social field and the normative significance of inequalities for actors by reference to a broader but
related distinction between internal and external goods. Alasdair MacIntyre
introduces this distinction in his critique of modernity (MacIntyre, 1981,
pp. 187ff.).13 While MacIntyre does not explore the sociological implications of the distinction, his ideas can benefit from such an exploration
(McMylor, 1994).14
Internal goods are those that are internal to a practice in which one
takes part, such as the specific achievements or excellences and satisfactions of doing complex skilled work and other activities well, whether
13
14
Something similar is also implicit in Adam Smiths distinction between praiseworthy acts
and praise, which we will encounter later (Smith, 1759:1984).
For commentaries on the implications of the concept for commodification and the arts,
see Keat, 2000.
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middle class and masculine model of the individual who is primarily concerned with pursuing his projects and is relatively free to do so. In using
the concept of practices I want henceforth both to broaden its scope to
include less socially elevated and less traditionally masculine ones, and
to extend the category of internal goods to include those internal to relationships, such as friendship or parenting.
This distinction partially overlaps with that between use-value and
exchange-value, and they share certain properties and normative implications, but the differences between the two distinctions are several.
First, whereas the use-value/exchange-value couple is characteristic of
commodities, internal and external goods may also be unrelated to
commodities; indeed, they may be related to things that cant be commodified, such as friendships. Secondly, internal goods are about not so
much what one might get from things (such as the mobility we derive from
a car) as the skills and excellences we develop through participating in a
regular and committed way in activities. Although their achievement is
generally satisfying, internal goods refer primarily to the achievements
or excellences themselves. Thirdly, one might sometimes want to argue
that the use-value of something includes its possibilities not only for providing access to internal goods, but for promoting external goods too,
as in the case of a prestigious car, in which case use-value would crosscut the internal/external goods distinction. Fourthly, while internal goods
may enable people to earn external goods, including money, they differ
from most use-values in that they cannot generally be alienated through
exchange. In some respects, then, the concepts of internal and external
goods are broader than those of use-value and exchange-value insofar as
they refer to activities, skills, achievements, relationships and recognition,
and are not associated only with economic goods. On the other hand, in
other respects, being simpler, the use-value/exchange-value distinction
is the broader insofar as it goes beyond practices and can be applied
to simpler activities such as market exchange and the use of mundane
goods. In the light of these differences I shall sometimes, according to
context, use the concept of internal and external goods in preference to
those of use-value and exchange-value, though there are some contexts
in which both apply.
Although they are not always incompatible, the normative implications
of the pursuit of internal and external goods are very different. Like Adam
Smith, MacIntyre acknowledges that external goods are genuinely goods
that no-one can despise . . . without a certain hypocrisy (1981, p. 196),15
15
As Lichtenberg (1998) also notes, we would generally regard anyone who was completely
indifferent to what others thought of them as psychologically suspect.
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but again, like Smith, he argues that they are properly tied to and parasitic
upon internal goods (see also ONeill, 1999). When we assess a research
project in terms of its internal goods, we focus on things like the quality
of its methodology, its use of theory and so on. In assessing it in terms of
external goods we ask how big the grant was, how much publicity it has
had, and so on. We expect the latter to be proportionate to the internal
goods; a sloppily designed, under-theorised bit of data-bashing should not
be rewarded with praise or money, while one that is carefully designed
and theorised, etc., should.16 Smiths point was that the internal goods
(or praiseworthy acts) would be good even if no-one happened to praise
them (Smith, 1759:1984). When a teacher manages to teach a child to
read both have achieved internal goods regardless of whether either gets
any praise for it, though of course one hopes that they would be praised. In
these respects, the normative implications of internal and external goods
parallel those of use-value and exchange-value. We are social beings and
we need the recognition of others: the question is what the recognition is
for, or, to put it provocatively, whether there is any problem with having
unearned income or status unrelated to any genuine internal goods.17 The
fear of many commentators was that the rise of capitalism and a highly
commodified culture would lead to the prioritising of external goods over
internal goods.
It also matters from whom the recognition or external approbation
comes: praise which comes from those who themselves excel in the
practice is valued more highly than praise from those who are novices
or ignorant of it (ONeill, 1999). We want to know whether what we
have done is really special or whether we are just being flattered or
patronised: giving a gold medal to someone who has achieved little, on
the basis of ignorance of the practice in question, devalues the award.
To win external goods without matching internal goods would be a hollow victory, enabling one to bathe in others disingenuous, or sincere
but misplaced, praise, knowing that one had done nothing to deserve
it, and in addition lacking the satisfaction of having achieved internal
goods. This means again that internal goods are seen as more fundamental than external goods. We want the latter, but we also want to deserve
them.
16
17
Some may want to protest that descriptions such as carefully designed are themselves
just external descriptions, but this misses the point, for of course all descriptions are in a
sense external; the point is that the goods in question (to do with learning) are internal
to the practice of research, whereas those of fame are not: although the latter may be
pleasing, research can be done without it.
The micro-politics of the social field often involves challenges to the external goods associated with practices by attacking the qualities of their internal goods. Thus, feminism
challenges the qualities or internal goods claimed for masculinity and femininity.
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This simple but important point about the expertise of the valuer or
provider of recognition of achievement has been widely overlooked in the
social theory of recognition. Given the localisation of particular practices
in the social field and their association with particular habituses, those
who are qualified to pass judgement on others often come from similar
social groups. The mutual recognition which goes with shared involvement in such localised practices helps create solidarity within class and
gender cultures. In other cases, where the experts occupy a more socially
elevated position, their judgements are likely to have overtones of condescension. Occasionally, the experts may occupy a lowly position: in the
case of football, which has a predominantly working class location and
knowledge-base, the relative ignorance of more middle class supporters
is a common source of amusement and derision among more traditional
supporters. However, notwithstanding these sociological aspects, from
the point of view of recognition of achievements it is the expertise rather
than the social position of the valuer that matters.
A partial exception to the dependence of external on internal goods is
the external good of money. Its acquisition does not even require any kind
of achievement or excellence, or approbation, even though these sometimes do prompt payments or gifts of money. In capitalist economies, the
distribution of gains and losses made by people in markets has much to do
with luck in relation to patterns of scarcity and demand rather than merit
and contribution. Secondly, money is also special because it is so colourless, liquid or transferable, so that even if we receive money as a reward
or payment for some praiseworthy service, it carries no trace of what it
was honouring. This is why competitions and awards usually dont award
just money but trophies which cannot be cashed in, and whose specificity
and non-transferability unambiguously mark the particular achievements
for which they were awarded. Anybody can get money, only very special
people can win a Nobel prize or an Olympic medal.18
Given the growth in importance of money and the orientation of capitalism to making money rather than producing use-values (the latter being
only a means to the former), it is not surprising that many commentators feared that external goods would become valued regardless of internal goods, and the management of appearances and impressions would
become more important than doing worthwhile things. Some authors,
like Smith and Veblen, may have been overly pessimistic in assuming that
18
In the realm of ends everything has either a price or a dignity. Whatever has a price can
be replaced by something else as its equivalent; on the other hand, whatever is above
all price, and therefore admits of no equivalence, has a dignity. (I. Kant, Groundwork of
the Metaphysics of Morals, quoted in Lewis White Beck (ed.), Kant Selections (New York:
Macmillan, 1988), p. 277.)
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satisfactory balance between different kinds of practices and other activities and relationships. Failures to find such a balance are evident in recent
concerns about workaholicism and time-poverty, and about the tendency
of many social policies to aim at a male breadwinner norm. It is not only
inequalities in access to particular goods and in burdens of necessary
evils that matter, but inequalities among individuals and social groups
in the possibility of achieving balance. In this context, policies for limiting
excessive working hours are crucial.
Bourdieu only occasionally distinguishes the two kinds of goods in his
definitions of capital, although it is sometimes implicit in his detailed analyses of particular goods (for example, in discussing educational capital he
occasionally distinguishes the competences acquired through education
from the external rewards which contingently attach to them (e.g., 1984,
p. 88)). One of the most important features of the struggles of the social
field is that they are not just for dominance or about relative position
in the status hierarchies, but about the struggle by people to live as they
want to. Inequality and domination rest on control of access to internal as
well as external goods, for without the former, not only would symbolic
domination be vulnerable, but there would be little point in competing
and struggling. Or, to put it in Weberian terms, there would be little point
in struggles of social groups to achieve closure, if it didnt give them privileged access to some internal goods and use-values. Even where it is
primarily driven by the pursuit of the external good of money, this in
turn is primarily a means for providing access to use-values and internal
goods, some of which are likely to be ends in themselves.
Having examined how internal and external goods are differently valued, we can now turn to how they are distributed across the social
field.
Inequalities and the distribution of internal and external goods
Involvement in practices tends to be strongly differentiated by class,
gender, race, age, and other social divisions. The sociological dimensions
of practices are important precisely because of their significance to actors
as a source of internal and external goods. While simple inequalities in
resources are important, inequalities matter to people most in terms of
their impact on the lives that they seek to live and the things, relationships
and practices which they value. They affect what Amartya Sen calls their
capabilities to engage in ways of life they have reason to value (Sen, 1992;
1999). Hence the significance of use-value and internal goods. Income
and wealth inequalities are only a rough guide to inequalities in access
to internal goods, for while many do require some expenditure, others
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119
practices which (a) matter a great deal for peoples well-being, whatever
their class or gender, and (b) are nevertheless very unequally distributed.
Trying to pass off the effects of these inequalities as mere differences in
lifestyles as if they were freely chosen and as if they were differences to
be celebrated is one of the most transparently disingenuous rhetorical
strategies of conservatism.
At the same time, the empirical results reported in Distinction show that
the correspondence between particular practices and certain parts of the
social field is only approximate (Bourdieu, 1984). This is to be expected.
Actors may be able to change their habitus by immersion in a new context.
They may sometimes want to transgress the social boundaries associated
with a particular practice . It is not unknown for a working class teenager
to want to become a doctor despite the social distance that she would have
to overcome. Bourdieu would have presumably said that this was not at all
inconsistent with her position but entirely predictable. The phenomenon
of children from poor families having unrealistic ambitions might be
interpreted as consistent with their social location which, unlike that of
middle class children, lays out no clear career paths before them, and
therefore prompts either resignation to limited prospects or unrealistic
aspirations. However, unrealistic or not, the teenager might still, despite
all the social barriers, be attracted to the internal goods of the practices
to which she aspires, and she might have some sense of what these goods
might be, regardless of whether she underestimates the barriers of class
(and gender) or recognises them but wants to challenge them. As usual,
sociologically-reductionist explanations of such behaviour which fail to
allow the possibility that the disadvantaged might understand and want
to challenge their disadvantage are likely to be demeaning and lead us
uncomfortably close to elitist mockery. Even if, as is likely, she fails to get
access to the practice , the desire to do so is significant for it would suggest
that actors own evaluations of practices and their internal goods are not
completely sociologically-reductionist. Precisely because such practices
involve goods which can provide fulfilment, social usefulness and moral
purpose, some individuals from unlikely backgrounds are likely to seek
them. This in turn provides the basis for some of the micro-political
struggles of the social field. Actors evaluations of practices normally
located in other parts of the social field from their own are not necessarily
negative; if they were, the dominance of those who monopolise them
would be weakened, as we saw earlier.
Three important implications follow from this discussion of the distribution of internal and external goods. First, given the asymmetric
relation between internal and external goods (the latter being properly parasitic upon the former, but not vice versa) and their different
120
In practice, as style fascism implies, things may be more ambiguous in that being equal
to peers may be a way of suggesting superiority relative to non-peers.
121
122
22
The word supposedly derives from the days of steamer ships from Britain to India when
the upper classes would select cabins on the Port Out and Starboard Home in order to
be in the shade. Classy is an interesting synonym.
To refuse such slides by, in effect, denying (correctly) that the posh is necessarily good
still leaves the class hierarchy intact, merely challenging the support it gets from symbolic
domination. The rich might lose some of their respect but they would keep their disproportionate wealth. Once again, where class is concerned, distribution is only secondarily
influenced by recognition.
123
indulge in the illusion, and peer pressure may push one to do so. While it
was sharply criticised by Smith and Hume as a form of vanity, it is significant that today the charge of vanity is rarely heard it seems both dated
and unnecessarily moralistic. Nevertheless, encouraged by advertising,
plenty of consumption is influenced by the desire to become an object of
envy. The lie is also given by the recent popularity of questions such as:
What do your clothes/car/etc. say about you? Here aesthetic judgements
are taken as an indicator not merely of lifestyle but of individual worth,
in terms either of competence, priorities and character, or more simply
of position in the social field, which we are invited to take as an indicator
of all those things.23
Equivalent ambiguities and slippages are found in the use of the word
common, as if whatever was widely distributed was automatically inferior, indeed vulgar, and whatever was rare (exclusive) was automatically
superior. Many euphemisms for class, such as well-spoken and from a
good family or rough, function by concealing status behind an apparently neutral judgement of merit.
The spoken and unspoken interactions of the social field are pervaded
with subtle and not so subtle sentiments of class contempt (Reay, 1998a)
and othering which are extraordinarily sensitive to indicators of accent,
demeanour, appearance, clothing and possessions. Although these may
be triggered by differences in style and aesthetic tastes, they chronically
spill over into judgements of moral worth, as is perhaps clearest in the
case of middle class judgements of working class womens appearance
(Skeggs, 1997). Descriptions of people as common or rough carry
moral connotations. If we ignore the hierarchically structured nature of
the competitions and struggles of the social field, we may misread them,
confusing the struggle for respect or respectability24 of the subaltern with
a struggle for advantage driven by vanity, or alternatively as simply an
expression of difference or lifestyle.
The striving for recognition that the dominated feel pressured into
when they find themselves talking posh in the company of people of higher
class, spending more than they can afford on weddings, not wanting to
look cheap, etc., are all understandable but doomed ways of trying to
win respect and prove that they are as good as them. The construction
of identities is not merely about the aesthetics of lifestyle but about moral
worth and recognition. The struggle is doomed because it is one which
the subaltern are not allowed to win, and it is in any case irrational to
23
24
However, as we noted earlier, not all struggles of the social field are driven by the pursuit
of advantage over others.
As I shall suggest later, the pursuit of respect and respectability are not the same.
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judge peoples moral worth according to whether their vowels are flat,
what they wear at weddings, where they can afford to live, etc. It is nevertheless understandable because we all need recognition of equality if
not superiority.
Of course the contingent relation between the posh and the good does
not mean that the posh cannot indeed be good; social theory is posh, for
example, but it can also be good (though it is worth asking if it is not
sometimes merely posh!). Equally, the common might indeed be bad. To
challenge the symbolic domination involved in the conflation of the posh
and the good and the common and the bad is not to deny such possibilities. In the case of culture, an optimistic interpretation of the weakening
of the hierarchical distinction between high and low culture, and the rise
of cultural omnivorousness, is that they suggest a growing willingness
to evaluate cultural goods regardless of their class associations, although
this may have more effect in terms of broadening the range of goods
available to the middle classes than in reducing symbolic domination and
inequalities.25 This latter possibility reminds us that the struggles of the
social field are often not intended by actors to assert or dispute symbolic
domination. They are in part about the pursuit of things and ways of
life which actors value regardless of their effect on the reproduction of
inequality and symbolic domination, though inadvertently their actions
may confirm, accentuate or weaken these. Bourdieu emphasised the way
that domination is inadvertently reproduced, but it may inadvertently be
reduced as well.
As noted earlier, it is irrational to devalue and reject things simply
because they are valued by the dominant, not only for the consequentialist reason that it is likely to confirm rather than challenge ones
exclusion and subordination, but because such a reaction by-passes the
question of whether those things actually are worthwhile. The lads, in
Paul Williss celebrated book Learning to Labour, who rejected dominant
norms regarding the value of education, damaged their own prospects
not merely because they invited the dominant to reject them, but because
they missed out on the internal goods of education (Willis, 1977). Education is worthwhile in itself because it enriches our capacities to flourish,
regardless of whether it brings us exchange-value. It is rational not to
value things which the dominant value only if their use-value or internal
goods are indeed worthless or over-rated. The same applies to rationales
for rejecting things associated with the subordinated.
25
125
126
Relativist and sociologically reductionist approaches according to which all beliefs are
purely a function of social position and experience can never grasp the significance of
these normative issues.
127
128
129
29
30
Although this is a relatively comfortable position, the recent rise of concerted cultivation
reflects, and is likely to intensify, uncertainty generated by increased competition for
middle class jobs and fear of failure. For the middle classes, parenting itself has become
deeply competitive.
. . . we write out of anger, an anger in which working-class child-rearing practices have
been either systematically pathologised or patronised . . . (Walkerdine and Lucey, 1989,
p. 2).
For example, many people in Britain would regard the posh practice of sending ones
children away to public school as far from good.
130
Reay (Reay, 1998b). These women were worried about how best to help
their children do well in a school environment dominated by middle class
values. While they felt under a middle class gaze, and resented this, they
wanted their children to be academically successful not merely to achieve
respectability or approval but because their children would benefit from it
as people. In other words, they were concerned with the internal as well
as the external goods of education. Their meetings with teachers were
frequently frustrating and stressful for them, but reading their accounts
of how they pursued their commitments to their childrens education, I
would suggest that the reasons for this lay not only in the relations of condescension and deference, or in differences in educational, cultural and
economic capital, but in difficulties in assessing the goods of education.
In both these cases I would suggest that the sensitivity and painfulness of such issues derives from the combined presence of the following
normative elements:
(1) Justified resentment of others undeserved advantages, and anger at
being (or having been) denied them. Note this presupposes that the
advantages are real and not illusory worth having, not spurious. The
proper target of criticism here is not the goods but the undeserved
monopolisation of them by the dominant classes.
(2) A less justified (though hardly surprising) temptation to refuse to
acknowledge that the goods that the dominant classes have monopolised include some that really are worth having. This can result in
a kind of self-exclusion, which of course is the most effective means
by which inequality and domination can be maintained.
(3) Justified suspicion that some values, behaviours, goods are actually
not worth having, but merely required or valued by the dominant, so
that there is a justified resentment at having to defer or conform to
them; i.e., this is a resistance to some norms because theyre merely
middle class or posh and nothing more. For example, speaking in
a posh accent is merely posh; there is no good reason why a posh
accent should be seen as any better than a regional accent.31 Here, in
contrast to the previous point, the scepticism concerns the goods
hence not their monopolisation, but rather the expectation that all
should conform to them.
(4) Despite the inclination to seek what seems best regardless of its class
(or gender) associations, there may be an awareness that as a matter
of tactics it is worth going along with norms whose only justification is
that they enhance individuals chances of success in the competition.
31
Regional accents are not necessarily less clearly articulated than posh ones, even though
they may be unfamiliar outside their regions.
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33
Being able to pass as one of the lads while also being able to get one up on them is one of
the most successful strategies of masculinity, and not just in youth or among the working
class.
Note again that the good may sometimes coincide with the posh, or indeed the masculine
or feminine.
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latter more than education, and the middle class giving more importance to education. On the one hand this reflects the lack of educational prospects of the working class and might be seen (as Bourdieu
would no doubt have proposed) as a way of refusing what they are
refused and making a virtue out of necessity; on the other hand,
we might question the middle classes scramble for qualifications
and their valuing of competitiveness over sociability, and defend the
working class choice. There is also a difficult question here of how to
balance ideals against immediate tactical imperatives; many middle
class people wish there wasnt so much competition for qualifications
and want their children to be well socialised and not merely academically successful, but their fear of downward mobility prevents them
from withdrawing from the educational competition. Again, these are
questions of how to live.
Analysing such judgements in this way creates a picture of the dispassionate deliberations of an observer whose standing is equal to that of
others, which is precisely not the case in class societies. There are not
only likely to be questions about the worthiness of the features of the
social situation which theyre considering entering, such as those noted
above, for individuals may also worry about whether they themselves are
worthy, or at least whether, to use a common euphemism, its for them.
Reay quotes one working class mother as saying regarding her daughter:
I do think it would be nice for her to go to Royden Girls. I know its got
a very good reputation but then again I thought what if the other girls
think shes not good enough to be there (Reay, 1998a, p. 271; see also
1998b, p. 62).
The possible suppressed meanings of not good enough are worth
lingering over, especially in light of the fact that individuals can hardly
make judgements of self-worth independently of their reception by
others. It seems easy to acknowledge that middle class people will choose
places and institutions which they regard as appropriate for their standing,
but shocking to be reminded that working class people may feel unable
to attempt to enter those places not only because they will experience
prejudice but because they feel that indeed they might not be worthy of
them.
All of this reminds us that the micro-politics of class, the struggles
against the soft forms of domination identified by Bourdieu, are not
only over access to existing goods but over the definition of what is good;
they are about who people want to be, what they want and can expect
to make of their lives, part of which, as the case of parenting shows, is
a struggle to form and pursue commitments and to get access to the
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means for doing so.34 In the process, they are simultaneously struggles
to establish self-worth.
Conclusion
The aim of this analysis of the struggles of the social field has been to probe
how inequalities are structured in relation to actors normative concerns.
By treating actors as evaluative beings and examining the relation between
the structure of inequality and symbolic domination and different kinds
of valuation and goods we can gain insight into how inequalities matter
to them. At the same time we have developed a normative perspective
on social life that is both continuous with the normative content of the
struggles of the social field themselves and yet goes beyond them and
thereby affords a critical view of them. As usual, evaluation involves a
re-examination of existing judgements.
This has been an analytical approach to the normative dimension of
the struggles of the social field over goods. No doubt Bourdieu would
have warned about the dangers of the scholastic fallacy i.e., projecting a contemplative, analytical relation to the world onto actors who, by
and large, have an unexamined practical sense of or feel for the practices
in which they live. I recognise that, in practice, inequality and symbolic
domination are experienced primarily emotionally and with only limited
reflection. In some situations, such as those described in the previous
section, actors are likely to experience powerful but mixed feelings of
envy, pride, resentment, anger and in extreme situations as a consequence consternation. While acknowledging the danger of the scholastic fallacy, I would argue that there is more rational discrimination and
judgement in lay action, including in emotional responses, than Bourdieu
claimed. (Paradoxically, they are evident in the actors accounts recorded
in The Weight of the World.)35 Furthermore, as I argued in chapter 2, emotions are not to be counterposed to reason but are evaluative judgements
about circumstances beyond peoples control which are likely to affect
their well-being and their commitments. What the above analysis was
34
35
Many of the interviewees in The Weight of the World emphasise the importance not of
appearances or material possessions but of their commitments, to others and to causes
or practices, and the disappointment and loss of sense of self that follows from inability
to carry these through. This is in line with arguments in philosophy which place lasting
commitments and relationships as central to the development of character (ONeill,
1999, pp. 84ff.).
On the other hand, if I am guilty of reading too much into lay actions, I hope that the
analysis may nevertheless be of some use in engaging with readers normative views.
134
Compare Bourdieus analyses in The Weight of the World (e.g., pp. 510ff.).
135
exchange-value and external goods over use-value and internal goods, and
for allowing their evaluative judgements to be distorted by class associations, as in the conflation of the common and the bad. As we shall see in
chapter 6 these two steps are also mirrored in the need for ethics both to
be grounded in social being and to go beyond its current forms. In making
the second step we have gone beyond description of lay normativity to
prescription of alternatives, though, as we have argued, these are basically
developments of selected tendencies already implicit in lay practice.
These arguments jar with the view that what is good and bad is not
something that can be judged independently of gender or class, but is relative to them. But it is one thing to acknowledge that our judgements are
influenced by gender and class, quite another to regard those influences
as carrying some authority (or indeed lacking any worth). The danger of
this assumption is that it essentialises gender and class. Gender and class
dispositions do not have essences; they do not derive from differences
in natural causal powers but depend on the contingent though powerful
ways in which individuals are socialised.37 Nor are they necessarily good:
even if those dispositions become deeply engrained in our habitus, and
therefore seem authentic, we can critically evaluate and attempt to override them if we wish. To be sure, given our habitus we can hardly help but
favour some things over others, but the habitus can be changed, albeit over
a long period of time. Feminism has developed a critique of the feminine
and masculine habituses, such as the formers self-abnegating tendencies
and the latters disposition towards dominance, and has had some impact
in changing men and women. There is no reason why the class dimension
of habitus should be spared a similar critique. For example, to have an
embodied taste for ease and for being deferred to and served by others
without reciprocating, on account of a privileged upbringing, is, I would
argue, unhealthy for both the individuals themselves as well as others.
Our dispositions can be challenged so that they become more than just
reflections of our position within the social field, perhaps even becoming
at odds with it, though ultimately one would hope to change the social
field so that it is conducive to the formation of habituses which allow a
better social order in which all can flourish.
This radical attempt at judgement independently of class and gender
or other social divisions might seem to imply a view from nowhere, or
worse, its universalism might be accused of covertly being based on a
37
As argued in chapter 2, social constructions are constrained and enabled by the causal
powers and liabilities of the materials they use. But in this case these properties are not
themselves differentiated by class, or indeed by gender, even though the latter, unlike the
former, is socially constructed around or by reference to real and imagined biological
differences (Archer, 2000; New, 2004; Sayer, 2000a).
136
specific social location. I would argue, however, that it implies a view from
the basis of interactions between classes and genders, between individuals
who of course are always more than just bearers of class and gender,
whose behaviour cannot be judged purely in those terms. As I argued in
chapter 2, ethical sentiments and norms are less socially localised than
aesthetic ones, and have, in part, universalising tendencies deriving from
the reciprocal character of social relations, from their responsiveness to
our human as well as our more specifically cultural being, and partly
from experiences of good and bad treatment which are not reducible to
effects of class and gender or other social divisions but cross-cut them. As
before, I invite those who are still sceptical to put forward an alternative
normative approach.
I recognise that my argument here is strongly anti-relativist, and there
may be not only relativists but readers who are in general anti-relativist
who find it too strong: they may want to say that judgements regarding
goods are always going to be relative to actors situations; or they may say
that judgements may differ with respect to the same situation, if different
discourses about it are available. Both points are correct, but normative
arguments about how we should live, about distribution and recognition
and the nature of the good, need not only be restricted to questions of
what is best given existing patterns of inequality and difference, but can
be extended to questions of whether those patterns should exist at all.
Egalitarianism is not merely about how people should act but about the
legitimacy of the positions from which they act. Moreover, the position
I have advanced does not propose a single vision of the good but rather
leaves this open; I have not said which kinds of use-value, internal goods,
practices and commitments are good only that they are more fundamental than exchange-value, external goods and preferences. But then
the search for the good is part of what the strivings and struggles of the
social field are about.
Such matters take us beyond the politics of distribution and recognition
by raising the questions about what kinds of goods matter and hence
what kinds of inequalities are most important, and also for what kinds
of characteristics or behaviour recognition is being sought. Though it is
important to combine the politics of distribution and recognition, it is
not enough, at least in terms of how they are normally defined, for they
do not address very clearly what people can do and how they live but
instead focus on some of the preconditions of such matters, whether to
do with material resources or the recognition of others.38 The categories
38
In Amartya Sens terms they do not address peoples capabilities, but merely some of
the factors contributing to them (Sen, 1992).
137
of recognition and distribution are simply too thin on their own to enable
us to get far in understanding the significance of inequalities, and of
material and symbolic domination. Those of internal and external goods
and commitments get us closer to what people value in life.
Exploring the sociological implications of concepts such as that of internal and external goods helps not only to clarify the structures within
which domination operates, it also helps us see that if we are to understand much about inequality, domination and how to counter them, then
we need to discuss lay and other concepts or senses of the good, wellbeing, etc. Without clarifying our ideas on the latter, we are likely to be
unclear about where our criticisms of existing arrangements are coming
from, what exactly they are criticising, and where any policies for change
should be headed. In feminism it has been recognised that attempts to
change gender orders need to decide what kinds of norms and objectives should be set, for example, whether employment policies should
aim at a male breadwinner norm or a female caregiver norm or some
other norm (Fraser, 1997). If one starts thinking about the third option,
we quickly run into complexities, for example concerning the distribution of responsibilities for care of others when people have made different
choices about whether to have children, and people differ in their own
needs for care. The complexities affect individual and social well-being,
by influencing the choices that people can make and the responsibilities
they bear. Unless one tackles such issues, it becomes difficult to defend
critiques of the status quo let alone work out what changes are needed.
Though usually having roots in different theories and philosophies from
those drawn upon here,39 much feminist literature addresses matters to
do with the nature of the good (e.g., on the ethics of care, the public
and the private, sexuality, capabilities theory) (Feminist Economics, 2003;
Segal, 1999), but there seems to be no equivalent of this in relation to
class. What do women want? which always means what should they
want? is regularly asked in the popular media without expecting the
answer to be To be like men. No-one asks What do the working class
want?, although if they did many middle class people might assume the
answer ought to be To be like us. Diane Reay argues that . . . the solution
to class inequalities does not lie in making the working classes middle class
but in working at dismantling and sharing out the economic, social and
cultural capital which go with middle-class status (Reay, 1997b, p. 23).
In addition, I would argue, it involves re-assessing how practices both
in the narrow sense defined by MacIntyre and in a broader sense and
goods are valued as well as how they are distributed, by disentangling the
39
138
good and the bad from the posh and the common. At what norms and
goals should attempts to reduce or eliminate class differences aim? One of
the many reasons socialism ran out of steam could be that it stopped considering such matters, so that as it was succeeded by neoliberalism and
The Third Way, the questionable goal of attempting to extend middle
class ways of life to others became the implicit target by default.
Introduction
We are evaluative beings. Our streams of consciousness have an evaluative dimension which ranges from spontaneous, unexamined, unarticulated feelings about other people, objects and practices, and about what
to do, through to more considered evaluations of those things (Archer,
2003). As we argued in chapter 2, emotions or sentiments should be
taken seriously as they often provide highly sensitive evaluative judgements of circumstances bearing upon peoples well-being and what they
care about (Nussbaum, 2001). In using the term evaluation I shall henceforth stretch it beyond its normal scope to encompass the whole of this
range. The intensity of these responses also ranges from the subtlest differences in ease or unease, preferences and aversions, through to strong
identification and approval or revulsion and disapproval. They are central
to the subjective experience of class and it is the purpose of this chapter
to examine their normative structures.
In dealing with forms of inequality such as those of class, or gender
or race, it is customary to focus on phenomena such as snobbery and
elitism, sexism, racism, contempt, disgust, othering, and the like, that
is, on sentiments and practices which are in various ways oppressive,
immoral or, in more old-fashioned language, vices. This is understandable given social sciences emphasis on the study of social problems;
indeed, many myself included would have doubts about the point
of social research that did not deal with social problems of some sort.
However, from the point of view of understanding the subjective experience of class this is unsatisfactorily one-sided, for it fails to do justice to
the complexity of lay normativity. It is not only that there are also sentiments of mutual respect, benevolence and compassion, alongside contempt and disgust and the like, but that the struggles of the social field
make little sense if we ignore the virtues and moral sentiments and focus
purely on the bad, for the former incline actors towards both maintaining
139
140
141
142
See Smart and Neale for an analysis of lay morality and such dilemmas in relation to
marital breakup (Smart and Neale, 1999).
143
144
This identifies the weakness of simple dichotomies of the positive and the normative with
respect to ethics. (See chapter 9.)
Despite this it has to be said that Smith does also sometimes use sympathy in the more
common sense.
145
7
8
In light of more recent developments in the philosophy of social science and social ontology, we might now want to fill out the notion of fellow-feeling by including a hermeneutic
dimension in which actors frames of meaning overlap, although it would be important not to reduce fellow-feeling to a purely linguistic mode, for Smith clearly included
pre- or non-linguistic forms of communication.
Although Smith invoked the imaginary figure of the impartial spectator in analysing how
people judge behaviour he saw the impartiality more as a goal than as an achievement. He
also saw this figure as ordinarily imagined by ordinary people, not as a moral philosopher
or other authority.
Smith has a very rich and nuanced account of the tensions between the capacity for
fellow-feeling and the unavoidably self-centred character of actors perception of others.
It is possible that such exceptional cases could be a response to a common humanity,
though this is something contemporary sociology would generally be reluctant to concede.
While I am sure sociologists are as capable of cross-cultural fellow-feeling as anyone else,
it could alternatively be explained as itself a learned, culturally specific, capacity. If it is
the latter, we should ask if it is a good one to have acquired. If it does not exist, then
ethics, being a matter of both empirics and aspiration, leaves us open to aspire to that
which is lacking.
By the verb moderate I intend here an analogy with university examiners work of
moderating,
146
11
Once again, as Glover notes, claims about moral sentiments and virtues are partly empirical and partly matters of aspiration. Severe lack of fellow-feeling can exist, but, as in
autism, it is likely to be seen as a problem. Even the Ik, of central Africa, studied by
Colin Turnbull, who famously lost the moral sentiment of compassion after losing their
land, continued to require sympathy in the Smithian sense, for it is a precondition of
social life (Turnbull, 1972). Part of the difficulty for sociologists is that an explanation
of the phenomenon would properly take us into psychological processes.
I dont think this requires any exaggerated notion of either the unity (coherence) or the
uniformity of subjects; it merely presupposes some degree of similarity. Neither does it
assume that fellow-feeling is infallible.
147
14
15
As before, beliefs along with conceptions may be a feeling rather than something
on which the actor has deliberated.
These possibilities may be purely hypothetical but nevertheless vivid; the pitier may feel
confident that the misfortune will never affect her, but that were she in that situation,
perhaps in another society, she would also be vulnerable. Charities such as Oxfam rely
on this.
Such claims come with a ceteris paribus clause for such sentiments may be overridden by
other considerations.
On this slippage from compassion to (ashamed) contempt and disgust, see also Nussbaum, 2001. It is perhaps easiest to appreciate in the case of attitudes to the elderly
infirm.
148
The relative social positions of the pitier and pitied make an important
difference here. Where compassionate relations exist among people of
similar position in the social field, there need be no overtones of condescension. Where, as occasionally happens, compassion is felt towards
the suffering of someone of a higher social position as in the Diana
syndrome there is obviously no condescension either. But in the more
common situation where the compassion is directed downwards, to the
suffering of those whose social position is weaker, and where the suffering
is a product of their social position rather than a random misfortune, pity
is likely to be seen as condescending and humiliating; indeed, realisation
of this may deter the pitier from expressing their compassion publicly.
Moreover, it is likely to be experienced as not only condescending but
hypocritical if the pitiers own relative good fortune is connected to the
suffering of the dominated. This may be true of compassion of the dominant for the dominated in the cases of all the major axes of inequality
gender, race and class. To the extent that the pitier in this situation recognises his or her own complicity in the processes producing the suffering it
may be accompanied by feelings of guilt. To the extent that the suffering
is a product of social structures irreducible to interpersonal relations, and
is recognised as such, it may be accompanied by a more political anger
about such structures.
Envy and resentment
I have no respect for the passion for equality, which seems to me merely idealizing
envy. (Oliver Wendell Holmes, Jr, cited in Hayek, 1960, p. 85)
At the same time he wrote of the need for proper indignation at insult and injustice
(Smith, 1759:1984, p. 243).
149
the dominant, indeed the contempt of those who have benefited from an
unfair and unjust system for those who have been dispossessed or blocked
by it. For those who believe that most wealth is created by workers and
appropriated by the bourgeoisie the jibe is akin to thieves dismissing the
complaints of those they have dispossessed as based on envy. For those
who believe that economic inequalities come about through a range of
mechanisms that have little to do with responding to need, effort or merit,
the accusation is also a cheap shot.
Nevertheless, egalitarians may find the accusation discomforting
because it appears to involve a double bind:17 to deny it seems implausible, for if theres nothing to envy about the ways of life of the rich and
powerful why should one want to redistribute what they have?; on the
other hand, to acknowledge envy appears to invite dismissal because it
is widely seen as a low motive. To get past this dilemma we need to
reconsider the meanings of envy.
Envy can be resentful or unresentful. In the former case it can either
prompt the envier to seek to seize that which is denied to them, or alternatively to destroy it. In the latter case (benign envy as Rawls calls it) it
may reflect the enviers regret about what s/he lacks, rather than antipathy
towards the envied, who may indeed be seen as admirable (Rawls, 1971,
p. 532). The envy of those who have won through a fair competition (on
a level playing field), whether through luck or effort and skill, does not
warrant resentment. It may even be combined with a generous acknowledgement of the envieds entitlement to their advantages. In some cases,
it can be acknowledged that envied skills and talents can also benefit
others, though insofar as the acquisition of these skills may have been
assisted by unearned, undeserved advantages, this praise may be qualified. The association of envy with resentment may be something some
actors want to avoid since feelings of resentment may reduce their own
happiness, and they may prefer to be generous and unresentfully envious and hence content. Even when perfectly justified, resentment can
be more painful than acceptance for those who have been exploited or
excluded. By expressing a generous kind of envy they may also win the
approval of the envied and appear to retain the moral high ground.18 By
this means, the attempts of the dominated to maintain goodwill can help
17
18
Of course, the double bind is itself disingenuous in the context of a society which worships
wealth and power and nurtures envy in order to encourage consumption (Baker, 1987,
p. 142).
Smith notes these possibilities but regards this magnanimity as disingenuous and as
liable to give way to shame (Smith, 1759:1984, p. 244). This too seems to involve a
double bind envy is detestable but attempts to avoid it through such strategies must
fail.
150
to maintain their domination. In this case, far from being associated with
egalitarianism, envy may indicate class deference towards the dominant.
While Aristotle uses envy pejoratively the envious are pained at all
good fortune (1980, p. 43) he also refers to the righteous indignation
in response to undeserved good fortune (ibid.). Similarly Runciman
(1966, p. 11) distinguishes between a feeling of envy and a perception of
injustice (see also Baker, 1987, pp. 1412). It is the latter sentiment
which I would argue amounts to what Carolyn Steedman has called
proper envy: . . . by allowing envy entry into political understanding,
the proper struggle of people in a state of dispossession to gain their
inheritance might be seen not as sordid and mindless greed for the things
of the market place, but attempts to alter a world that has produced in
them states of unfulfilled desire (Steedman, 1985, p. 123). This, I would
argue, is right. The kind of envy associated with egalitarianism is less to do
with possession of material goods than a product of systematic exclusion
from things which are held to be valuable for all.
Justice
Actors sense of justice and fairness may be selective but it would be
bizarre to deny its existence, whatever its imperfection. For Smith, the
sense of justice derives from resentment at injury done to others as would
be judged by an imagined other or impartial spectator.19 It therefore
derives from the capacity for fellow-feeling, from imagining the suffering
of the one who has been harmed. This encourages the negative virtue
of abstention from harm and inclines the observer to resent harm by others. Smith also invokes another sense of justice one which is often
overlooked in moral and political philosophy but which is essential to
the ongoing evaluations that actors make of their situation and others:
this is the sense of doing justice to the particular qualities of a person,
object or circumstances. It is thus far removed from abstract principles
of justice such as those of Kant or utilitarianism.20 It implies that what is
morally required in our dealings with others is that we pay close attention
to these particularities, so that our responses are appropriate: for example, evaluating others and how we should act towards them in terms of
need, desert and situation (Griswold, 1999, p. 233). When we feel that
19
20
Recall that the imaginary figure of the impartial spectator is not regarded as infallible,
nor does he or she have to be detached from the social field, indeed were they to be so,
they would lack precisely the moral imagination required of them.
As many commentators have pointed out, such abstract principles presuppose for their
persuasiveness the existence of actors already equipped with moral imagination and
sentiments.
151
The susceptibilities and capabilities vary but mostly within recognisable limits, as for
example between those of infants and adults, the sick and the healthy.
152
autonomy (Baier, 1994). It need require no appreciation of others qualities, no active contribution to their well-being, no enjoyment of social
virtues, merely the avoidance of harm to others and their property. In
their everyday actions, people do not generally knowingly limit the freedom of their class others, but respect in this minimal, negative sense
their autonomy.22 Respect for others autonomy and rights and tolerance
of their ways of life can thus range from a feeling of the sanctity of individuals through to mutual indifference or contempt.23 As Norman Geras
argues, in modern societies, the flawed liberal ideal too often reduces to
a contract of mutual indifference (Geras, 1998).
Shame . . .
Shame has been described as the most social of the emotions, as it has
often been assumed to be an important mechanism of social integration,
making individuals conform to external judgements and norms (Barbalet,
2001; Scheff, 1990). Although Smith did not single it out for discussion in his analysis of moral sentiments, it is occasionally mentioned24
and is implicit in his emphasis of the way in which people monitor their
own actions by viewing themselves from the standpoint of others. At the
same time, it is a particularly private, reflexive emotion, in that it primarily involves an evaluation of the self by the self.25 Shame is a complex
emotion evoked by failure of an individual or group to live according to
their values or commitments, especially ones concerning their relation
to others and goods which others also value, so that they believe themselves to be defective. It is commonly a response to the real or imagined
contempt, derision or avoidance of real or imagined others, particularly
those whose values are respected (Williams, 1993). While the negative
judgements may be verbalised, they can also be signalled intentionally or
unintentionally through expressions and comportment, and in the way
the shamed person is generally treated. To act in a shameful (or contemptible) way is to invite such contempt, including self-contempt. It
22
23
24
25
However, they may limit it unintentionally through minority private property ownership
of resources like living space, land and other means of production, which restrict the
liberty of non-property owners (Cohen, 1995).
Smith recognised both the moral sentiment of the respect for the sanctity of the individual, seeing it as central to justice, and the horror of solitude (1759:1984, II.ii.2.3,
p. 84).
E.g., 1759:1984, pp. 845.
Shame is usually prompted by some experience in relation to others, imagined or real,
but primarily concerns the self: Shame is the most reflexive of the affects in that the
phenomenological distinction between the subject and object of shame is lost (Tomkins,
in Sedgewick and Frank, 1995, p. 136).
153
may be prompted by inaction as well as action, by lack as well as wrongdoing. Particularly where it derives from lack rather than specific acts,
shame may be a largely unarticulated feeling existing below the threshold
of awareness one that is difficult to get in touch with, yet still capable of
blighting ones life, both in terms of how one feels and the impression one
makes on others and hence how they respond to us. As we shall see, this
low-level shame, which shades into low self-esteem, is particularly common among subordinated groups. It has somewhat different characteristics from the more intense, sometimes burning, shame that follows from
specific actions. At the extreme shame can be an extraordinarily powerful
emotion involving endless reflection and self-condemnation, sometimes
tormenting people to the point where they commit suicide or violently
attack others (Gilligan, 2000). Its power is evidence of the importance
of recognition by others. To be ashamed is to feel inadequate and shrink
from the gaze of others. Because of its seriousness as an index of ill-being
and failure and the fact that we can feel ashamed of our shame, it is generally only acknowledged through euphemisms by those who experience
it, for to admit shame publicly is humiliating (Scheff, 1990).
Like all emotions, shame is about something: it has referents. It may
relate to failure to achieve valued appearances, for example in looks or
clothing (aesthetic shame), failure to carry out some task to an expected
standard (performative shame), or more importantly failure to conduct oneself in ways deemed proper, and to live in ways considered
acceptable (moral shame). It may also be a product of internalisation
of others contempt for ones identity. All of these kinds of shame are
common in the context of class inequalities. Like other emotions, shame
is a fallible response in the sense that it can be unwarranted or mistaken.26 The person who through no fault of their own has a despised
body shape or who cannot afford fashionable clothing has done nothing
shameful, but might still feel shame. Equally, the complementary feeling
of contempt may be unwarranted, if it is unrelated to any shameful or
contemptible behaviour for which the despised can reasonably be held
responsible. This is the case with class contempt. Thus, as with other
moral sentiments, we can acknowledge the existence of shame without endorsing every instance of it as appropriate. We may even deem
some sentiments of shame to be misjudged or immoral, for example,
the shame of married men of my fathers generation whose wives went
out to work, which supposedly indicated that they were unable to keep
them.
26
This is less obvious than in the case of its opposite, pride, instances of which are often
described as false.
154
Many vegetarians cite shame in response to the suffering of animals reared for food as
one of the influences upon their vegetarianism.
155
29
Middle class guilt and shame is usually very limited and mixed with a good deal of
self-justification. There are often only the barest traces of these sentiments because class
inequalities are normalised, if not naturalised, and in any case responsibility for class
inequalities lies with social forces that are not reducible to individual actions.
If distress is the affect of suffering, shame is the affect of indignity, of defeat, of transgression, and of alienation . . . While terror and distress hurt, they are wounds inflicted
from outside which penetrate the smooth surface of the ego; but shame is felt as an inner
torment, a sickness of the soul. Tomkins, in Sedgwick and Frank, 1995, p. 133.
156
31
See also Kefalas, 2003. Presumably the managers were not shamed by this contempt
because they did not regard the workers as worthy judges of their character and because
they had other sources of self-respect, particularly achievement.
Unlike Tomkins and Nussbaum, however, I dont believe this applies to the low-level
shame of members of subordinated groups.
157
Bartky attributes this specifically to women, though I suspect it also occurs in men, albeit
less commonly.
This is another instance of the questionable association of the good with the posh.
158
159
ideals, and discipline and punish themselves. Discourses may give people scripts, but people can care about some parts of these scripts and feel
indifferent about others according to how they bear upon their well-being;
they are not merely programmed by discourses. (Recall that discourses
cannot voluntaristically construct just anything: even though they can
try to define well-being they may fail to do so and be resisted by actors
drawing upon conflicting parts of the same and other discourses.) Underneath the remarkable variety of cultures, the universal human capacity
for shame is one of the mechanisms by which people are ensnared by
discourses and norms, in all their diversity. But the metaphor of being
ensnared is also too passive, for the human need for recognition, whose
pursuit always carries the risk of failing and being shamed, drives us to
seek out ways of acting virtuously from among the many possibilities
offered and defined by our culture. All this is not to deny the common
presence of power in social settings involving shame, but on their own,
concepts of power, whether in capillary or arterial form, cannot explain
the internalised normative force and selectivity of shame responses. Thus,
although not directly acknowledged by Bourdieu, a capacity for shame is
a necessary but rarely acknowledged condition for symbolic domination;
indeed, the latter is scarcely intelligible independently of these
emotions.
However, it is superficial to regard shame merely as an emotion which
produces social conformity, for this fails to do justice to its normative
structure, and therefore fails to explain the full range of its effects. The
desire to avoid shame may promote resistance rather than conformity.
Those who are fervently anti-racist, for example, may speak out against
racism in situations where doing so might put them at some risk. If we
had no normative commitments, then it is hard to see why we would
ever want to resist and how we would ever be shamed, because we would
simply go with the flow, accepting whatever the pressures of the moment
required. However, the anti-racist who keeps silent when others make
racist remarks is likely to feel shame for conforming instead of resisting.
Shame can therefore produce either conformity or resistance, but we
cannot make sense of this if we reduce it to no more than a product of
fear of external disapproval.
Which behaviours are worthy of pride, and which are the proper cause
of shame, is of central importance normatively, and traces of such concerns may be apparent in internal conversations. They are especially likely
in modernity, given the plurality of value systems and the emphasis on
the project of the self. There are different sources of value and respect
for example, domesticity, vocational achievement, parenting, masculinity and femininity many of which are partly mutually incompatible.
160
35
This is borne out by Diane Reays research on working and middle class mothers experience of putting their children through school, discussed in the last chapter (Reay, 1998a)
and also the experience of academics of working class origin (Reay, 1997a).
Thanks to Bronislaw Szerszynski for drawing my attention to this research.
161
with competing pressures and value systems and though we dont necessarily have to resolve many of the resulting tensions in order to get by in
daily life, they are likely to produce emotional ambivalence. The subaltern in particular are likely to be torn between envy and rejection of dominant values and the associated goods lying beyond their reach, and hence
between acceptance and refusal of shame. That shame can sometimes
be a product of situations beyond actors control is vitally important for
understanding the experience of class. It is all the stronger where actors
have individualistic explanations of inequalities. Thus the black working
class youths studied by Jay Macleod who believed in the American dream
of individual responsibility for ones own fortune were more vulnerable
to shame than their white counterparts who rejected it (Macleod, 1995).
By the same token the French working men studied by Lamont were less
likely to feel shame than their US counterparts because they had a more
structural and politicised understanding of class (Lamont, 2000).
. . . and Humiliation
Closely associated with shame is the production and experience of humiliation. This is occasioned not merely by the attribution of deficiency to
an individual or group, but by public affirmation of this inferiority, in its
most extreme forms requiring the humiliated to confirm it by debasing
themselves (Glover, 2001). Humiliation ranges from particular acts, such
as the denigration of a child by a teacher in front of classmates (which
might be for their social class, race, gender, body shape or sexuality, or
reasons unconnected to these), to mild, implied forms of humiliation such
as speaking for others who can perfectly well speak for themselves. The
very presence of wide disparities of wealth, coupled with the tendency for
advertisers to invite consumers to see their consumption as a measure of
their worth, could be said to have the effect of humiliating the poor.36 This
might be termed structural humiliation. Fear of humiliation encourages
the dominated to hide their poverty or other forms of lack, and to conceal
anything which signifies their low status. It can also prompt superfluous
conspicuous consumption (at personal cost) to conceal the lack. (It is
interesting that critics of capitalist culture tend to notice the conspicuous
consumption more often than the related concealment of lack, reading it
as evidence of profligacy.)
Humiliation may also be caused by benevolent acts. Targeted redistribution based on means-testing, for example, may be well-intentioned but
36
Tawney referred to the moral humiliation that gross contrasts of wealth and economic
power necessarily produce (Tawney, 1931, p. 41).
162
provokes resentment and lack of response because of its humiliating character, for it publicly draws attention to the recipients lack.37 Especially
where specific goods, rather than money, are distributed on the basis of
means-testing, it implies a lack of respect for the recipients autonomy,
for it involves intruding in decisions which for others are private. In this
way, despite its intentions, charity can be humiliating (Wolff, 2003). It is
possible though rare for members of the dominant classes to realise the
danger of redistributing in ways which humiliate and demean the poor.
Just as generosity on the part of the dominated towards the dominant
(if theyve earned it theyre welcome to it) legitimises and perpetuates
inequality, so the moral desire on the part of some members of dominant
groups to avoid humiliating the poor may deter them from doing anything
about the inequality (Anderson, 1999; Wolff, 2003).
The humiliation of means-testing illustrates the structural nature of
class. The old arguments of egalitarians against mere charity appealed
to reasons that can help us understand symbolic domination. Even if
it is argued that the poor are not poor through any fault of their own
and therefore should claim the benefits without feeling humiliated, the
enduring, structural nature of economic inequality, and its close correlation with inequalities of cultural, educational and other forms of capital,
are likely to make acceptance of such a position difficult. It would be
different if redistribution on the basis of means-testing were compensation for a rare, one-off disaster, but against the backdrop of the structural
inequality, the exceptional and palliative nature of the policy is bound
to undermine its legitimacy in the minds of its potential beneficiaries.
Where the dominated are confident that their disadvantages derive not
from personal deficiency but from injustice in terms of both distribution and recognition redistribution is more likely to be understood as
affirming entitlement rather than repairing lack.
For Smith, these and other moral sentiments have their basis in moral
psychology, in our vulnerability and our physical, psychological and emotional dependence on others: All the members of human society stand
in need of each others assistance, and are likewise exposed to mutual
injuries (Smith, 1759:1984, II.ii.2.4., p. 85). The assistance may derive
from actors sense of justice, gratitude and benevolence or from a sense
of utility, prudence and enlightened self-interest, especially in the case of
market relations (ibid., p. 86; see also Smith, 1776:1976). The universalising component of morality derives not simply from an abstract principle
but, as Smith argued, is implicit in the psychology of social interaction.
The need for the pleasing consciousness of deserved reward encourages
37
163
actors to treat at least some others fairly, and indeed well. That actors can
gain such recognition from within their own group may mean that they
have less need for it from others, but they still need it from somewhere.
That the desire for deserved recognition is often overridden by more antisocial dispositions and motives (of which Smith was well aware), which
are often encouraged by inherited inequalities and injustices and their
associated legitimising discourses, does not contradict this claim. Unexercised powers or powers which are exercised but overridden by others
are the normal stuff of open systems such as those of society (Bhaskar,
1979; Collier, 1994; Sayer, 1992, 2000a). It is these counteracting or
overriding tendencies to which we now turn.
Immoral sentiments and class
Class contempt38 (Reay, 1998b), like other kinds of othering, ranges
from visceral revulsion, disgust and sneering, through the tendency not
to see or hear others as people, to the subtlest forms of aversion. In its
mildest forms it may merely involve a slight feeling of unease when in the
company of others, and may merge into a sense of not belonging rather
than hostility towards the other. Even at its mildest, class contempt can,
on certain occasions, such as job interviews, make a major difference to
peoples life-chances. It responds to accent, language, appearance, comportment, demeanour, values, actions, possessions and lifestyle. These
correlates of class differences are minutely acknowledged in literature,
in every soap opera, and lampooned in comedy.39 Class contempt thus
includes but goes beyond snobbery and can be felt up as well as down
the social scale. Like racism or sexism, ageism, or homophobia, it lacks
any rational moral basis. Yet it is striking that while sexist and particularly
racist language has become taboo in official discourse, the language of
class contempt has not, so that, for example, the Times Higher Educational
Supplement could report without critical comment that the chief executive
of the Council for Industry and Higher Education referred to students
from lower social groups as the unwashed, needing to develop their
social skills (THES, 17.5.2002).40
Others may be derogated or privileged simply by virtue of their class or
gender, etc. Who is this person? Whats their background? Anyone who is
38
39
40
I use Reays term in preference to Bourdieus class racism, which obviously carries
unwanted baggage.
Indeed it is a measure of the pervasiveness and significance of classed behaviour that in
theatre or films an actor who failed to act as befits the class of the role they were playing
would be judged a very poor actor.
See Skeggs, 2004 for discussion of many other examples.
164
out of place is likely to be regarded with suspicion: how can this working
class person be stylish?; how can this person with a working class accent
be a professor of politics?; how can this female plumber be competent?;
and so on. Such cases illustrate how signifiers of class, gender or race
serve as prompts for judgements of worth. Doubts about the capacities
and sometimes even the propriety of the out-of-place individual reveal the
kinds of expectation and valuation held regarding those who are in-place;
working class people are not expected to be capable of intellectual work,
or women of being plumbers. Class contempt is typified by illegitimate
slides from aesthetic to performative and moral disapproval. It is complemented by approval of self and those of the same class and projection
of all that is bad and immoral onto the other, which reciprocally confirms the goodness of ones own class (Skeggs, 2004). This is evident in
the criminalisation of the black working class and more recently the poor
white working class, and the condoning of middle class crime. Further,
working class women in particular are in many cases treated as objects of
disgust focusing on excessive artificial appearance which immediately
signifies moral worthlessness (Skeggs, 2004, pp. 99ff.). This bolsters the
upper middle classes impregnable sense of superiority, and a less secure
sense of superiority in the petits bourgeois.
Like many emotions, contempt can be betrayed by facial expressions
the raising of the upper lip into a sneer even if it is not expressed verbally. As Tomkins points out, this is a physical drawing back from the
object of disgust or distaste (Tomkins, in Sedgwick and Frank, 1995).
As usual such expressions tend to take more subtle forms in the upper
classes, given their avoidance of strong facial expression and displays of
emotion. Being in a position of dominance they do not need to send
out any stronger signals and to do so would only indicate that they cared.
Hence the slightly grimaced smiles rather than aggressive sneers. They do
not have any need to resent others, even if others disgust them, whereas
for dominated groups resentment is more likely to be the stronger feeling. Class contempt was famously evident in Margaret Thatchers facial
expressions when answering questions from interviewers about things and
others that she found distasteful, particularly people she regarded as inferior. Her answers would often be preceded by a short pause to indicate the
irksome nature of the question and the inferiority of the questioner, then
an intake of breath through the mouth during which the upper lip would
be slightly pulled back by the cheeks. Her mouth movements would suggest an unpleasant taste, and as she drew herself up to speak she would
half close her eyes and look downward and then up again. She would tilt
her head to one side patronisingly with a withering look as if talking to a
165
42
43
Of course, one of the extraordinary features of Margaret Thatcher was her appeal to some
strains of working class authoritarianism, to those who wanted to distance themselves from
people they considered below them. This reminds us that while relations of domination
and condescension and deference typify inter-class relations, they are also to be found
in other sites, including members of the same social class.
The distinction between condemnation of others and condemnation of particular
behaviours is an important one and sometimes evident in lay thought. See below,
chapter 8.
Deciding what would be fair and justified judgements in the context of these forms of
difference is often not a matter of disregarding difference and attempting to impose a
single standard; thus the differences between the young and the elderly may not all be
false ascriptions but may require judgements which take them into account. In other
words, the issue of deserved and undeserved recognition takes us into the debate over
equality and difference, explored particularly in feminism (e.g., Phillips, 1997).
166
Those familiar with Smith will know that the omitted parts of this quotation are important for understanding Smith. However, delving into this would require a substantial
digression which does not affect my argument.
167
168
Introduction
As we saw in the discussion of the micro-political struggles of the social
field, the ways in which people act towards class others involve varying
mixes of pursuit of advantage, deference, resistance, and pursuit of goods
for their own sake. But they are also influenced by their moral sentiments
and norms, which are only partially inflected according to class and other
social divisions. They can operate (not necessarily intentionally) within
the terms of class hierarchy or without regard for it. Yet, even actions
which are not driven by struggle for advantage over others, indeed, even
those that have egalitarian motives, are likely to be twisted by the field of
class forces in ways which reproduce class hierarchy.
In this chapter I focus on four responses to class: egalitarian tendencies,
the pursuit of respect and respectability, class pride, and moral boundary
drawing. There are overlaps and tensions among all of these. Wanting to
be equal can be coupled with wanting respect. Class pride claims and
asserts what the pursuit of respectability merely seeks, and is usually
coupled with moral boundary drawing. The subaltern, in particular, are
likely to slide from one response to the next. In the context of structural
class inequalities, all of them are likely to provoke condescension. They
are most easily described in terms of intentions, but they may all also
exist below the threshold of consciousness as dispositions, as part of the
habitus.
While all these matters concern the subjective experience of class, they
are responses to objective social structures, distributions of capitals, hierarchies and differences, discourses and cultural values. They are intertwined with other axes of inequality, particularly gender, but they reflect
the distinctiveness of class. As we saw in chapter 4, the determinants
of class, in the broad senses used by Bourdieu and in lay discourse,
encompass both identity-sensitive mechanisms, such as those involving responses to actors cultural capital and status, and identity-neutral
169
170
Responses to class I
171
172
This view is especially common among middle class students. It typically goes with a
belief that they can get on with anyone.
Responses to class I
173
174
racists may enjoy Indian food and despise those who produce it, so middle
class people may enjoy football but feel varying degrees of contempt for
working class supporters, footballers, and footballers wives. When they
do get access to working class goods and practices they are unlikely to
be accepted by the working class, as we saw in the case of working class
ridicule of middle class football supporters. These are rare occasions on
which the working class can extract some symbolic profit from the middle
classes and experience the pleasure of being able to refuse the privileged
something they want, instead of the more common situation of refusing
what the privileged refuse them.
However, while these forms of refusal of class mixing are utterly understandable in terms of the struggles of the social field, if the motivation
of those who try to mix across class divisions are not selfish then this
kind of negative reaction would itself be anti-egalitarian, saying in effect:
Respect the class system!3 Cultural and moral differentiations associated with class can be used to police any transgressions of class, including
those of would-be egalitarians, and sometimes doing so is seen as an act
of resistance, but it can have conservative effects. There is a danger of this
for example, in Beverley Skeggs hostility to such transgressions (Skeggs,
2004). Ironically, the egalitarian may meet more class resistance from
the dominated than do those members of the dominant classes who simply ignore them and respect class differences. Many still expect others
to behave in accordance with their position, as long as they show
others respect. Being what one is may seem more dignified and easier to
respect than trying to be what one is not. Professionals in particular are
allowed indeed expected to be different. However, the implicit ethic
of authenticity is dubious since it naturalises social hierarchies. Similarly,
as Bourdieu notes, the working class are likely to be more hostile to one of
their own number who tries to be middle class to be something theyre
not than to a middle class person who acts in familiar middle class
ways (Bourdieu, 1984).
Condescension is commonly thought of simply as a form of individual
behaviour, which may or may not be enacted. This might be the case
where someone who is actually an equal of others puts on a condescending manner in her interactions with them, indicating that she imagines
herself to be superior. But usually condescension involves relations among
unequals. Condescension of this form is commonly ambiguous. The person in the superior position is normally considered condescending if she
3
Similarly with regard to gender, a man trying to be non-sexist and doing feminine
things may be under suspicion: is he just trying to gain some advantage (e.g., sleep with
feminists)? or does he have a genuine egalitarian desire to behave in a non-sexist way
regardless of whether it brings him advantages?
Responses to class I
175
It is notable that in older literature, say nineteenth century and earlier, before the rise of
egalitarianism, condescension was not seen in negative terms.
It might seem mean-spirited and overly class conscious to dwell on these obstacles (let
alone dwell on class for a whole book!), but the problem lies with class inequalities
themselves, not their recognition.
176
continually frustrates egalitarianism at the level of interpersonal interactions. The dilemma for egalitarians regarding class is that while they
may consider class immoral, the way they interact with class others is
unlikely to do more than muddy the waters of the micro-politics of class.
It may even ease class tensions by reducing symbolic domination and
with it resistance to economic inequality by encouraging the illusion that
we are all equally resourced for living as equals. As Nancy Fraser notes,
the last thing the working class need is recognition of their difference
(Fraser, 1999; see also Coole, 1996), though of course, particular working class people may want it, and outsiders may genuinely consider particular goods of working class culture worthy of value. The complexities
of inter-class relations and recognition derive from the fact that at the
level of the micro-politics of everyday life people of all classes want and
need recognition, though not necessarily of their class identity.
Respectability and respect
. . . I began to feel in my flesh that being respectable and getting respect were
not one and the same. Anyone listening to Aretha knew that. Respect was about
being seen and treated like you matter. (bell hooks, 2000, p. 20)6
Responses to class I
177
it usually implies a demand for respect for cultural difference, not merely
respect according to dominant norms. In disaffected marginalised young
men for whom there are no attainable respectable options because of class
or race or gender, it may take the form of seeking respect through intimidation and the celebration of the bad as good (Macleod, 1995). For poor
white marginalised young men, this could be a response to the refusal of
recognition and goods which would allow them to be equal on majority
terms, and the unavailability of an alternative culture whose standards
and goods they could achieve. Thus, while the desire for respectability
defers to hierarchy and dominant values, the demand for respect from
the subordinate does not. Respectability involves being inoffensive, not
sticking-out (Southerton, 2000b, p. 196), keeping out of trouble, moderating sexuality, being respectful of and acceptable to the (upper) middle
classes, thereby avoiding their moral and aesthetic disapproval. Those
who set great store by it may therefore pay a heavy price in terms of selfrepression. Respectabilitys deference to dominant values also allows it to
be coupled with snobbery towards those below, so that confirmation of
respectability can be obtained both positively from above, and negatively
by contrast with the unrespectable below.
One of the main concerns of the young working class women studied by Beverley Skeggs was to be recognised as respectable, though this
recognition was generally denied to them, not only because of their class
but because of their gender and sexuality. This caused them considerable
distress (Skeggs, 1997). However, it could be argued that the problem
with this is not that respectability was denied to them, but that they
wanted respectability rather than respect in the first place. As Skeggs
notes, Engels referred to the ideal of respectability as a most repulsive
thing and a false consciousness bred into the bones of workers (cited
in Skeggs, 1997, p. 3). At the same time, the more challenging nature
of the demand for respect does not, of course, necessarily make it any
more successful than the pursuit of respectability indeed, it is likely
to be resisted by the dominant as disrespectful, strident, ridiculous and
undeserved.
Whatever the strengths of this kind of analysis, it involves a radical
reductionism in that it merely inverts the conflation of the posh and the
good and the common and the bad, so that the respectable becomes bad
and demands for respect automatically valid. As we saw in chapter 5,
things are not so simple for the obvious reason that we cannot assume
that dominant values are necessarily wholly unworthy of respect, and
merely products and devices of symbolic domination. Dominant values
especially moral values are not necessarily reducible to the values of the
dominant. They may include moral values of propriety which are good
rather than merely posh. Insofar as recognition involves a conditional
178
10
Responses to class I
179
a major social test, provoking anxieties which may outweigh those they
have about their illnesses. Proving themselves to be respectable not only
morally but in terms of social standing involves particular attention to
appearance, bearing and speech so that negative aesthetic and moral evaluations are avoided. Doctors especially male doctors11 may be seen
as key figures in their communities, perhaps the only professional, upper
middle class people that such women encounter; in fact, with the decline
of church attendance and the social standing of priests, they may become
the most elevated local people of all to have frequent contact with large
numbers of the community.
The doctor would be expected not only to take their symptoms seriously but to grant them recognition as respectable, this being a form
of noblesse oblige, though one that is not honoured unconditionally, but
conditionally upon the respectability and deference of the patient. The
confirmation of respectability here is particularly critical given the nature
of medical examinations, the cross-gender as well as cross-class nature of
the encounter, and the severe embarrassment that many of this generation
and class of women have about their bodies, which have to be talked about
through metaphors and euphemisms. Respect is more likely to be communicated through carefully modulated distance rather than familiarity,
so that through his bearing and gravitas the doctor affirms rather than
denies his elevated social position. For the patient, recognition is seen as
all the more valuable if it is clearly coming from someone of higher status.
He may also be expected to show professional flair, even panache, so that
he is seen not merely as an agent or transmitter of impersonal expertise
but as something of a virtuoso. He is therefore expected to be able to personalise the performance of the role, so that the patient recognises him
as having character, as being, say, Dr Smith, rather than just any doctor
someone who is a figure in the community, someone by whom one should
feel proud to be recognised. This, of course, enhances his social capital.
Even a little brusqueness and arrogance may, if moderated with some
charm and pleasantries, be excused as evidence of his command and
standing. (Younger doctors who try to be more familiar and equal may
be regarded by these patients as lacking in competence and status and as
disrespectful not only because of their behaviour but because they are
not in a position to command and hence confer respect.) If the doctor
does treat them proficiently and with respect, they feel socially elevated
and tell their friends and family about the visit with pride. If, however,
the doctor fails to listen to them and treat them with respect, the patient
11
It should be remembered that many women of this generation still endorse patriarchy,
and therefore do not necessarily prefer to see a woman doctor.
180
may feel doubly aggrieved because not only has he failed to do his job
properly but she feels she has failed the social test.12
Thus the doctor is expected not only to be competent but to exhibit
appropriately gendered and classed behaviour rather than diverging from
such norms. Only then will his behaviour affirm the legitimacy of the
naturalised social order. The power relationship derives not only from
the asymmetry in medical knowledge between the doctor and the patient
but from symbolic domination related to class and gender. (The ability
of Dr Harold Shipman, the serial murderer, to get away with killing over
two hundred elderly patients, mostly women, for over two decades, no
doubt owed something to the deference inspired by his professional confidence and gravitas13 and to the esteem in which doctors are held in such
communities.)
For many such elderly petit bourgeois women, the struggle for
respectability is coupled with an intense privatism, and withdrawal from
unregulated social interaction. The two became particularly mutually
reinforcing in the mid-twentieth century, at the time of their early adulthood, with the growth of a limited economic security and private housing
for the upper working and lower middle classes, which made privatism
more economically feasible. This was also the period of the ascendancy of
the full-time housewife norm. Respect implies a certain distance which
allows the other autonomy, so that they are not intruded upon. Thus,
lack of need of others can be taken (not necessarily correctly) to imply
self-reliance and self-respect. They keep themselves to themselves is still
sometimes heard as an expression of respect for such respectful behaviour
in neighbours. By contrast, being open and gregarious is threatening
because: (a) it reduces this distance, so that there is a risk of being or feeling disrespected by others who are too familiar; and (b) it exposes the
seeker of respect to the vicissitudes of social relations through which she
might be embarrassed, whether by being dragged down by association
with the unrespectable or by exposing her inadequacies to the dominant.
Moreover, prolonged isolation could lead to the loss of confidence and
social skills, thereby making the loneliness harder to escape. The refusal
12
13
Further complexities in these relationships arise where the doctor is black and the patient
white or vice versa, producing conflict between deference to class, gender and competence on the one hand, and racist aversion on the other. There is of course a great
deal more which could be said about such interactions, particularly regarding gender
relations.
The dubious valuation of gravitas and confidence per se, regardless of whether they are
supported by competence or worth (in other words not only allowing oneself to be
conned but celebrating ones gullibility) remains one of the most common problems of
the micro-politics of everyday life, particularly organisational life, one which reinforces
middle class domination.
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181
It was probably always less common among fragmented, poorly organised occupations,
such as kitchen porters, than among highly organised workers like miners. Deindustrialisation can destroy class pride. The South Wales valleys, which once had the strongest
labour organisation and proudest working class culture in Britain, are now known as the
heroin capital of Britain.
182
those who are born into the middle or upper classes are falsely conscious
if they imagine this is something to be proud of, for this is a result of
an accident, not their efforts. Where middle class people take pride in
supposed virtues such as self-reliance and propriety a sentiment often
evident in right-wing newspapers they typically ignore their privileged
circumstances and their dominant relation to and dependence on the
working class which facilitate their attainment. They are largely bonuses
of their class position, not qualities they can claim credit for. Working
class people may also take pride in lacking the pretensions and affectations associated with insulation from the pressure of economic necessity,
and in the virtues of self-discipline and hard work that are needed to
cope with this, as was the case with the working class men studied by
Lamont (Lamont, 2000).15 There might also be class-specific cultural
goods that their holders feel proud to be associated with. More aggressively, the real or imagined question, Think youre better than us, do
you?, challenges those whose propriety and worth is part of their embodied symbolic capital rather than something they feel any need to prove.
To make such a challenge to the assumption of moral superiority of the
dominant implies that one has achieved self-respect and has little need to
pursue respectability. Yet pride in being working class can also be problematic, if it encourages an acceptance rather than a contestation of class.
Moral boundaries and prejudices
The tendency for class to be experienced through processes of cultural
differentiation and distinction has been brilliantly illustrated by Bourdieu
(1984). However, as Lamont points out, he greatly underestimates the
importance of moral boundaries while he exaggerates the importance of
cultural and socio-economic boundaries (Lamont, 1992, p. 5). Often,
as Dale Southertons study of class identity in an English new town
shows, people use a mixture of aesthetic, performative and moral criteria to define their own identities over and against others (Southerton,
1999, 2002a and b; see also Kefalas, 2003). Where moral boundary
drawing is of major importance to people it tends to be accompanied
by self-repression and surveillance to maintain conformity so that their
self-image is confirmed. For Southertons middle class interviewees, tidy
gardens and well-kept houses clearly indicated moral superiority. Working class residents regarded the middle classes as pretentious, and merged
generalisations about social status with personal characteristics in using
15
Responses to class I
183
These moral attitudes can be affirmed in the most minimal of social interactions. In rural
areas of Britain, it is common for people, including strangers, to acknowledge those they
pass with greetings such as morning, or lovely day. Where they differ in apparent or
actual standing, the greetings can be offered deferentially or condescendingly. However,
particularly where they are strangers, the greeting can be initiated by the person with
lower capital in a way which functions as an assertion of or appeal to moral equality,
inviting or guilt-tripping the other to confirm a generous, unconditional recognition of
equal status.
184
together with their acquired skills, can be turned to their advantage, overriding the hostility with which they are often regarded.17
These class-differentiated moral dispositions and attitudes are intelligible in the light of objective class structures. Class inequalities give symbolic domination a structural character, as we saw in the case of condescension. In a fundamentally unequal society the celebration of practices
such as painting or opera is bound to function as a celebration of cultural
and economic advantage, of superiority in aesthetic, performative and
perhaps moral worth. This effect operates largely independently of the
intentions of those involved in such practices. If there were an egalitarian
society, one in which there were no significant differences between social
groups in distance from necessity, in which the distribution of practices
and their internal goods across society was equal or random, then the pursuit and celebration of such practices would not involve any symbolic
domination.
Moral boundary drawing has a crucial ambivalence at its heart, which
can easily be overlooked: while it provides us with reasons for rejecting
and devaluing others, it also treats the merits claimed for our own group as
universally valid, while refusing to believe that the other could have such
merits. Whereas in aesthetic matters, many would be happy to tolerate
pluralism, they are less likely to do this with regard to many moral matters. To value down-to-earthness is not merely to say its only a good
thing for ones own group, though we might feel that only our own group
has this quality, but that everyone ought to be down-to-earth. Likewise
with cosmopolitanism. If people did not think these judgements were universally valid there would be no reason for them to think less of groups
which did not live up to them. Thus, while middle class valuation of cosmopolitanism could be attributed to mere pursuit of cultural capital for
advantage, this is also too cynical. Just as sociologists value foreign food
and holidays not only or necessarily in order to gain cultural capital but
because they consider those things worthwhile in themselves, regardless
of the advantages vis-`a-vis others that they bring, so other members of
the middle classes can value them for their own sake too.
Moral boundary drawing is also vulnerable to falsification, precisely
because members of other communities may be able to demonstrate the
qualities they are assumed to lack, or because members of the boundary drawers own community may fail to meet the standards they claim
to monopolise. However, such evidence is likely to be resisted. We can
illustrate this by reference to Maria Kefalass study of the white upper
17
Bourdieu (1993) used the term racism of intelligence, and in Pascalian Meditations
candidly notes, I do not like the intellectual in myself (Bourdieu, 2000, p. 7).
Responses to class I
185
186
Like Smith, we regard this universalisation to derive not from philosophical principles
but from the everyday interpersonal dynamics of fellow-feeling and recognition.
Introduction
In this chapter we examine how people explain and evaluate behaviour in
relation to class, and how they regard class itself. As we noted at the outset,
normative evaluation is likely to be more important to people than positive understanding of their situation. Yet these lay normative valuations
are also part of their situation, and, while they are often questionable, they
usually reveal something about both that context and their holders, and
are therefore worth probing for both positive and normative insights. Lay
attempts to understand and evaluate the behaviour of members of their
own and other classes involve many slippages and blockages but these are
themselves instructive. Such reflections could be seen as lay sociologies
and philosophies: indeed, some of the problems they run into are not
unlike those found in those disciplines problems of determinism and
free will, explaining and justifying, and weighing and relating social causes
and individual responsibility. Quite apart from all the likely distortions
of judgement produced by entrenched inequalities and the need for selfjustification, questions of blaming and praising and attributing responsibility are inherently difficult, raising deep metaphysical issues that have
been the subject of considerable philosophical debate (Williams, 2003,
2004a). Lay views of class itself are also complex, involving a tendency
for normative judgements of class and position within the class structure
to override positive assessments of what class is. Above all, attitudes to
class are characterised by embarrassment, defensiveness, denial and evasion, indicating its morally problematic character. The judgements and
responses can be performative or causally efficacious: but as always, just
how far, in what ways, and with what effects, depends on the properties
of the phenomena social, psychological and material they deal with.
If we analyse these evaluative responses, drawing upon insights of sociology and moral philosophy, we can develop a better understanding of the
visible and hidden injuries of class.
187
188
I shall begin with an analysis of how lay actors explain and sometimes
justify anti-social behaviour, illustrating it by examples, arguing that while
there are elements of refusal and denial in their responses, they are also
dealing with problems of explanation which are intrinsically difficult. I
shall then address the way in which actors judgements of their class
others sometimes involve fine distinctions between responses to their
identities and responses to their behaviour. Again, while there are elements of defensiveness and self-justification in such responses, the difficulties are also inherent in the object of their evaluation itself. Finally,
I shall examine the reasons for the common evasiveness and embarrassment about class, arguing that they are a product of class itself and the
objective social relations within which people live, and the available discourses through which they can construe them.
Explanation and justification: anti-social behaviour
In going about their daily lives people not only evaluate their own and
others conduct, but sometimes try to explain it, particularly where
they find the conduct objectionable. These explanations are a significant element of popular interpretations of class. Although actors may
just condemn, they also often attempt to explain why people are as they
are, why they behave in particular ways; indeed, such explanations are
a necessary component of the more considered evaluations that they
make. In effect, they sometimes think as lay sociologists or psychologists.
Bourdieu would no doubt have objected to such a description, on the
grounds that it projects the exceptional circumstances of the contemplative life of academics onto those they study. I have already made it clear
that we need to recognise both the scope of unreflective practical action
and the role of conscious monitoring and deliberation in everyday life,
but again, ironically the strongest answer to those who would marginalise
the latter is to be found in the interviews of The Weight of the World, where
such deliberations are articulated at length, often in ways which reveal
folk sociologies (Bourdieu et al., 1999). The interviewees not only condemn others and justify their own conduct, they also try to explain the
practices they condemn. Sometimes, being aware of the difficult circumstances in which those responsible for the acts have to live, they express
sympathy for them and consider excusing them.
As is typical of everyday understandings of the world, their explanations
of character and conduct are over-individualised, that is, they attribute to
individuals responsibility for events and circumstances good as well as
bad which are in varying degrees consequences of wider social forces.
Responses to class II
189
Not least, there is the problem of free will. For a discussion of responsibility in a similar
context to that of our discussion, see Midgley, 1984; Williams, 2003, 2004; and Smiley,
1992.
See also his interview of a tenant, ibid., pp. 83ff.
190
5
6
7
Of course, explanation by reference to such conditions can be too simple. It has been
frequently pointed out that Osama Bin Laden came from a privileged background. Other
influences have therefore to be admitted, in particular the role of discourses, possible
sympathy for the oppressed, and the possibility of unoppressed individuals seeking to
seize power using those who are genuinely oppressed.
As Garrath Williams points out, withholding all blame and attributing anti-social
behaviour wholly to upbringing and social conditions is ultimately insulting in that it
fails to acknowledge actors as capable of responsibility to be blame worthy is at least to
be worthy of blame: Blame is actually one of the modes by which we recognise a human
animal as one person among others, capable of entering into and sustaining relationships with
other people over the course of her life (Williams, 2004a, emphasis in original).
This remark was made in reaction to the murder of James Bulger, a two-year-old, by two
ten-year-old boys.
That a belief can be understandable yet mistaken of course already presupposes that to
explain something we do not have to approve of it.
As Mary Midgley argues, this determinism, or corporatism, tends to generate its opposite, the asocial individual whose realm of responsibility is grossly inflated. The word
ought itself presupposes at least some autonomy and responsibility (Midgley, 1984).
Responses to class II
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192
and enabled by various constitutive and limiting forces, but they have
powers which are emergent from those forces and which can react back
upon them, through interventions in the world. Thus we may become
more powerful by replacing unwanted determinations with wanted ones
(Bhaskar, 1979; Collier, 1994).8
Even the most determinist of social scientists abandon their determinism in their own everyday dealings with others. When others wrong them,
they do not simply accept it as one might accept a change in the weather,
but demand explanations, justifications and apologies. Sorry, but I have
no responsibility for my actions would not be an acceptable response
to such demands. There can be no blame or praise or need for apologies in a world where persons are no more than conjunctions of external
forces, with no emergent properties. That even the most determinist (like
the most relativist) social scientists do criticise, blame, thank and praise
others, and give and expect apologies in everyday life, acknowledges the
impossibility of determinism.9
All events have several causes and enabling conditions; that being the
case it rarely makes sense to attribute them to a single cause. But that is
what we do when we hold individuals entirely responsible for the outcomes of complex processes. Insofar as we attribute responsibility to
them, we acknowledge their own causal powers, including their capability for thinking about actions and their likely consequences. However,
even where we do acknowledge social constraints, there is often scope
for disagreement over how actors should (have) exercise(d) their limited
powers; for example, should they have worked within the existing constraints (i.e., in a reformist way) or challenged some of the constraints
(taking a more radical line of action)?
Some forms of social organisation possess whether by design or
by accident fail-safe mechanisms which make it unlikely that such
inevitable, common fallibility will lead to much harm, while others make
it highly likely. This is one of the reasons why pathological behaviour
is so often localised. Particular kinds of socialisation, providing both
8
Responses to class II
193
11
While this avoids restricting evil to individual acts of violence, we dont need to invoke
structural violence to explain and/or justify individual violence or other anti-social
behaviour. As Mary Midgley comments, This seems a tortuous and misleading way of
expressing a justification which can stand perfectly well on its own feet. Injustice and
oppression can be worse forms of wickedness than violence, but they are still distinct
from it (Midgley, 1984, p. 75, emphasis in original).
See Glovers analysis of Hobbesian traps (Glover, 1999).
194
interviewed by Loic Wacquant make it clear that their world is overwhelmingly Hobbesian (Bourdieu et al., 1999, pp. 13067), and that if
they were not suspicious of others, and continually on their guard and
prepared to use force, they would be sure to end up as victims. (Certainly,
such behaviour is strongly gendered, but that too is a product of socialisation again not merely as external force or discourse but mediated in
and through the long process of formation of selves or subjectification
through social interaction in specific material contexts.)
The problem in social research, as in everyday life, is (a) to decide how
much autonomy and responsibility individuals have not only for their
actions but for the kinds of people they are,12 and (b), insofar as they do
have some autonomy, to assess how it is exercised, whether their reasons
and motives are good. To ignore rationality as an emergent property of
human social being and to attribute everything that anyone does wholly
to social conditions is an absurdity, which is contradicted every time we
reason with people. The answer to (a) is partly an empirical question about
practicalities and partly a normative question about how much responsibility
individuals should be expected to exercise.
These points bring home the need to think about equality and morality in relation not only to a theory of human social being but to concrete
societies and their dominant social relations and the typical kinds of individuals they produce. Acknowledgement of the double-sided nature of
ethical life implies the need to focus on both internalised dispositions
and social circumstances. Moral theory generally abstracts from the latter, as if social life could be represented by a model of already-formed
rational moral actors deliberating on how they should behave, situated
within uniform, neutral, social conditions. Normative writing on morality frequently has to resort to appeals to what the normal, rational, moral
actor would do, without considering that the formation of such beings
is itself a contingent social process, dependent on favourable perhaps
widespread but not universal circumstances. It is as if the existence of
individuals who do not conform to the ideal were merely an inexplicable aberration, a random quirk of nature, an irritant to the development
of ethical theory, rather than something in need of explanation. Ethical
theorys overwhelming focus on the good and its marginalisation of evil
as simply the absence of the good is wholly inadequate. The costs of
moral philosophys disengagement from social science, particularly sociology and psychology, are no more clear than here. A proper analysis of
morality would have to examine the concrete circumstances, including
12
Adam Smith seems to have thought this was impossible to determine (Griswold, 1999,
p. 251).
Responses to class II
195
the available discourses, that form individuals and their ethical dispositions in particular situations.
Recognition of the social origins of anti-social behaviour diverts attention from individuals to social structures and relations, including not only
relations of domination but the many systematically produced unintended
consequences of actions, whether harmful or beneficial. It is tempting to
say that this involves a switch from moral concern about individuals to
a political concern about social relations, but the latter has also to be
morally informed if it is not to degenerate to matters of expedience and
the rule of might.
Philosophers use the concept of moral luck to draw attention to the
fact that the outcomes of our actions, however they be motivated, are
often dependent on circumstances which are outside our control, yet we
are often judged on the outcomes alone.13 As Smith notes, to deny approbation to someone for good outcomes that owe much to luck because they
do not wholly deserve it may seem mean-spirited (Smith, 1759:1984).
Conversely, to appeal to bad luck in ones own defence may seem like
whingeing and even reasonable appeals may be suppressed for this reason. In such cases, even if we are aware of the contribution of moral luck,
we may be reluctant to acknowledge it explicitly.
While the phenomenon of moral luck is familiar to all, its distribution,
whether good or bad, is unlikely to be even or random across the social
field; actions that succeed in one social context may fail in another. The
good works of the rich and powerful are not only more conspicuous
than those of the poor but more likely to produce impressive results.
Similarly, we might talk of performative luck, concerning the influence
of luck on the outcomes of activities which do not have direct moral
implications. Thus, the success of schoolchildrens efforts to learn are
affected by luck in terms of access to books and computers, trips abroad,
etc., all of which vary with class so that an upper middle class child
and a working class child may make the same effort at school but with
quite different results. Insofar as they receive reward or recognition, this
is unlikely to be moderated by discounting for the effects of this luck.
Thus the rich are likely to congratulate themselves for what they dont
deserve and the poor to blame themselves for what they equally dont
deserve. The poor US white and black young men studied by Jay Macleod
mainly blamed themselves for their lack of success, even where they had
worked hard and kept out of trouble (Macleod, 1995). However, there
can also sometimes be awareness of, and hence discounting for, moral
13
These circumstances could include others responses to the behaviour, for example,
whether they are hostile or receptive.
196
Responses to class II
197
that supposedly harm or offend others are not, and are instead subject
to universal norms. In some cases, the distinction is simple and unproblematic, but in others, where the behaviour is more strongly associated
with the identity, either by choice or by necessity (or through constitutive moral luck), the problems are more intractable. On the one hand
it acknowledges and accepts difference, or claims to. On the other hand
it makes appeal to standards regarding behaviour that are supposedly
shared by those who are being criticised. The accused may reply that the
critic is at fault in taking offence at their behaviour. The behaviour in
question may indeed be part of the others identity and seen as legitimate by them. Thus in Northern Ireland the Protestant Orange Order
regularly claims the right to stage intimidating marches through Catholic
areas on the grounds that doing so has long been part of its identity, to
which many observers would reply that this indicates that the identity
itself is therefore objectionable. Identities are not inviolable. Difference
may be bad. There are also situations where the problematic behaviour
of A is a response to oppression for example, aggression in response
to oppression but is seen by B simply as part of an anti-social identity.
In some more difficult cases A may see their behaviour not merely as an
effect of oppression but as a positive feature of their identity. Occasionally
there are indications of awareness of these problems in actors evaluations
of others.
In some cases the standards regarding behaviour which impacts on
others are not shared. Liberals argue that individuals and by implication groups should be able to do what they like provided they do
not harm others. But harm is difficult to define. John Stuart Mill, who
provided a classic defence of this position in his On Liberty, distinguished between preventing someone harming others, and expressing
disapproval of behaviour which does not cause actual harm but may nevertheless be considered to be bad (Mill, 1859 [1975]). While he argued
for both, he did not consider that such disapproval might be unwarranted and could take the form of stigmatising groups and harming them
indirectly.
The difficulties of distinguishing between disapproval of behaviour
and disapproval of identity go deep because of the social character of
behaviour the fact that behaviours have consequences not only for those
responsible for them, but for others. For example, a less remarked feature
of Paul Williss much-cited study of working class boys and schooling
in Learning to Labour is that in disrupting lessons, the lads were hindering the progress of other children (Willis, 1977). This indiscipline
is a prime concern of middle class parents in Britain. Imagine a conversation between two white middle class people, one right-wing (R),
198
the other left-wing (L), both of whom live in middle class residential
areas.
R: If youre so egalitarian why dont you live in X [a poor area with a large black
population]?
L: Im not against the working class or black people of course not, but the
rate of burglaries and other crime there is much higher than here, and the
indiscipline in schools and the risks of bullying for my children are much
higher than here. I hate these unnecessary divisions between groups and
I despair of the hostility between them, but nor do my children or I want
to be victims; the problems are structural, not something I can alter as an
individual. Simply desegregating people doesnt change much, indeed it just
makes the struggles more overt. Yes, I am in a sense living in bad faith but
what can I do about it? At least Im not in favour of inequalities and racism.
Antipathy towards those middle class radicals who, in their every public move and utterance, try to be politically correct is partly a reaction to the use of radical ideas to enhance
their holders cultural capital and increase their social distance from the working classes
and from members of rival fractions of the middle classes. (Of course racism and sexism,
etc., are far worse.)
Responses to class II
199
characteristics, between social discrimination and legitimate discrimination (Bourdieu, 1993, p. 179), are common among the educated:
It is possible for people to be egalitarian in their views about wealth, both wanting
a more equal distribution and resisting the tendency to value people for their
wealth, and yet valuing qualities, such as being educated, whose distribution is
strongly influenced by wealth, so that they discriminate among others in a highly
inegalitarian way, selecting out those who are able to talk seriously about things.
(Lamont, 1992, p. 171)
With some justification egalitarian intellectuals may be regarded as hypocritical in this respect, failing to recognise the privilege of being able to
adopt a contemplative relation to the world and develop the academic
skills known as intelligence, and underestimating those forms of intelligence not consecrated by the educational system. It can lead to what
Bourdieu terms a racism of intelligence, which can be experienced by
its victims as being no less exclusive than those vulgar forms of racism
which are stigmatised by the intellectual elite, indeed as all the worse for
being portrayed as legitimate by those who normally condemn racism
(Bourdieu, 1993, pp. 1779). Though it is unlikely to be intended, it
allows the children of subproletarians or immigrants [to be referred to]
in such a way that social cases become psychological cases, and social
deficiencies mental deficiencies, etc. (ibid., p. 179). The recognition of
this displaced or second-order form of legitimation of discrimination creates moral dilemmas for egalitarian intellectuals and is likely to lead to
bad consciousness. However, aside from attacking economic inequalities
and the educational mechanisms which tend to reinforce class inequalities by legitimising them in terms of educational qualifications, there
is no way out of such dilemmas. Merely trying to act more equally
towards others does not change these structures and merely intensifies
such dilemmas, though of course that is not a good justification for not
doing so.
From a normative point of view we need to assess the values and
behaviours themselves rather than simply affirming or rejecting them
because of their class associations; particular beliefs and behaviours
may be unequally distributed by class and gender but they are not good
or bad because of such associations but regardless of those associations
(Sayer, 2000b). For example, arrogance is more common in the dominant
classes than in the subordinate classes, but it is bad in itself, wherever it
occurs; while one of the bad things about the dominant classes is the fact
that they are often arrogant, arrogance is not bad simply because of that
class association though it may be symptomatic of that classs relation
to others and it would not become good if it became more common in
200
Responses to class II
201
position, for it also carries the suggestion of a further unspoken and offensive question: what are you worth? This, in turn, could refer either to
wealth or moral worth or other forms of merit. On the one hand, from a
normative point of view, one could argue that these are separate matters.
This disjunction between economic valuation and ethical valuation can
be taken (disingenuously) by the Right to indicate that economic
inequalities do not harm people, and are therefore acceptable. However, as we have argued, economic inequalities cannot help but influence
recognition.
Tutors who try to get new social science undergraduates to talk about
class face similar responses of unease and evasion. As the students gain
more experience of sociology they may gradually lose this unease as they
learn to objectivise class and disassociate it from their sense of themselves
in relation to others; indeed, learning to become a sociologist can seem
like a process of learning to bracket out these concerns. While experienced sociologists might put the novices unease down to naivety about
sociology, and feel superior about their own ability to confront class dispassionately, I would suggest there is something to be said for inverting
that valuation: while the beginning students have not yet unlearned their
very justifiable sense (albeit a scarcely articulated sense) of the moral
problems of class, sociologists have unlearned them and become desensitised to them. What is a fraught and highly sensitive issue for many
people has all too often become, in the hands of sociologists, a dry academic debate about social classification schema. As Honneth notes, social
theory also has difficulty registering struggles arising from the moral experience of disrespect and tends to transform these into categories of interest (such as cultural capital and symbolic profit) within a basically
Hobbesian model of social conflict (Honneth, 1995, p. 163; see also
The ve` not, 2001).
I want to argue that unease and ambivalence about class are reasonable rather than mysterious responses, and that it is sociologists blase
amoralism which is at fault. We can explain the former responses by
probing further into the moral significance of class. My explanation is
simple, consisting of three kinds of argument, the first concerned with
the injustice of class, the second with its distorting effect on moral sentiments, and the third with the injuries caused by class. There are strong
interactions between these, but they are most easily explained separately
first.
1.
202
Many moral philosophers would not accept this even as a partial defence (e.g., Baker,
1987).
Responses to class II
203
is at least some recognition among those born into and remaining in the
middle classes that they have had undeserved advantages which do not
necessarily warrant considering themselves more worthy than others who
are less fortunate. In either case, there seems to be an implicit recognition
that class is problematic. Their embarrassment about talking about class
reflects not so much a denial of the fact of class as an acknowledgement
of its lack of justification.18
There are further reasons why the appeal to desert is difficult and hence
why those who make it do so in rather defensive ways. These are articulated in the corresponding literature on equality in moral philosophy.
Here it is common to argue that if talents are innate they are clearly undeserved and therefore warrant no special reward; or, if they are acquired,
their acquisition owes much to whether conditions were favourable in
early life, which of course reflects class and gender. Even the motivation
and the amount of effort people put into their activities may be a product
of class and gender background; where there are good prospects (though
not too easily gainable) motivation will be encouraged, where there are
none, it will not. Although these are somewhat sophisticated arguments
against simple justifications of class position in terms of desert,19 I would
suggest that there can sometimes be glimmers of awareness of them in
lay thought, and these too are likely to prompt defensiveness.
Not all reactions to class inequalities are so generous. The anger and
contempt of the better off (including the more secure working class)
for those who are dependent on state welfare is not only a reaction to
having to pay taxes towards their upkeep, perceived as supporting those
unwilling to work, but also a form of contempt for those in a state of
dependence. To be dependent is to lack autonomy and dignity, and to
lack these qualities is to invite contempt. Those spectators who fail
to realise that the dependent have little control over their fates are likely
to despise them for that as well as for having to subsidise them. While
natal class is a matter of luck, the poor are typically expected to attempt
to strive to escape from their unfortunate position. This is evident in the
long history of discourses which distinguish between the deserving and
undeserving poor, albeit in increasingly euphemised ways, as in recent
workfare discourse. On the one hand these recognise the arbitrariness
and unfairness of class, but only for those who supposedly deserve help,
while treating class inequalities as justified for those who are undeserving.
18
19
204
Meanwhile, affluent people who live off the labour of others are rarely
seen as undeserving.20
One of the common false assumptions that lie behind many of these
kinds of reactions to class is the belief in a just world (Lerner, cited
in Williams, 2003), that is, a belief in the moral well-orderedness of the
world, so that good intentions straightforwardly produce good actions
with good effects, which in turn proportionately reward the actor, giving
them their due. Hence, the extent to which individuals lives go well or
badly is believed to be a simple reflection of their virtues and vices. It
refuses to acknowledge the contingency and moral luck which disrupt
such relations arbitrarily.21 Many things happen to us good or bad
which we neither deserve nor do not deserve: they happen regardless,
driven by forces which have nothing to do with justice or human wellbeing. While philosophers are apt to portray these as random contingencies impacting on individuals and coming from nowhere in particular,
they also include the largely unintended effects of major social structures
such as those of capitalism. In other words it is possible to identify structural features of society which add to the lack of moral well-orderedness in
the world, and do so not merely randomly but systematically and recurrently, so that the goods and bads tend to fall repeatedly on the same
people. Thus there is a great deal of path dependence and cumulative
causation in the reproduction of class and geographical inequalities. In
explaining these persistent inequalities, the Right tends to appeal to random contingency as the main cause, while the Left appeals to structural
causes.22
2.
The second source of defensiveness about class has to do with the problem identified by Adam Smith, that moral sentiments about others can
20
21
22
The category unearned income is rarely encountered today, having been replaced by
the oxymoron independently wealthy (personal communication, Abby Day).
In the terms of critical realist philosophy, it assumes the world is a closed system in which
a given action or other cause always produces regular effects. Social institutions typically
attempt to create approximations of closed systems around particular activities, but they
never control contingency completely. Societies are open systems, structured in various
ways by social structures having varying degrees of durability.
This is clear in Hayeks treatment of inequality as primarily a matter of misfortune
(Hayek, 1988). He accuses socialists of the fatal conceit of constructivism the idea
that society can be rationally planned. This might be taken to imply a belief in the possibility of constructing a just world. Socialists have indeed exaggerated the possibilities of
planning, but then Hayek underestimates them, partly by constructing an individualistic,
structureless model of society in which there is only random contingency.
Responses to class II
205
This is different from failure to take into account moral luck in that it involves double
standards responding to such differences regardless of outcomes.
Similar observations on double standards were made by Tawney (1931, pp. 378).
206
like as a person that matters, not class. Similarly, while the commonly
expressed egalitarian desire to take people as we find them indicates
a desire to judge people according to their behaviour and attitudes and
avoid the tyranny of stereotyping according to social categories, it can
also be used as a way of denying the import of social divisions.
In the same vein, comments such as I dont believe in class, often made
by middle class sociology undergraduates when embarrassed by having
to discuss it, are instructive. Even when the tutor says, Im not asking
you whether you think its a good or bad thing, Im asking you whether it
exists and makes a difference, the answers often continue to be evasive
and blur the distinction between the positive and the normative; I believe
what matters is who you are, not what your parents did or what school
you went to is a refrain often heard, particularly from relatively privileged
students. Its ambiguity is deceptive: it can be taken either as a normative
argument against the wrongs of class, or a positive claim that class has
little effect which of course is false, and disguises class privilege, while
allowing those with class advantages to take credit for what is actually
undeserved. While they claim not to think of themselves as morally superior they see little problem with inequalities in economic, cultural and
social capital these being presumably acceptable because they dont
make you a better or worse person. This is a spurious egalitarianism that
allows the lowly to say the dominant are their equals and hence which
tolerates inequality. It also patronises the disadvantaged. From the point
of view of the disadvantaged and harshly judged, as we saw earlier, the
distortion of moral sentiments according to class can also produce inner
turmoil as a result of the opposing pulls of both wanting to refuse the
perceived external judgements and their criteria and wanting to measure
up to them.
The embarrassment and evasion indicate an awareness that class differences lack moral justification. The lucky may realise that they are lucky
and not want to be seen as claiming superiority because of this, while
the unlucky/poor will quite reasonably resist any conclusion that they
deserve their disadvantages. Rather than dismissing such sentiments as
missing the sociological point, and as an ideology which serves to obscure
class, I suggest they should be taken seriously both sympathetically and
critically.
3.
Injuries of class
Responses to class II
207
The class injuries result both from the material lack and inequalities produced by processes of capitalist uneven development, which result in
differences not merely in consumption but in peoples ability to develop
and realise their skills and commitments, and from the effects upon individuals and groups of class contempt, symbolic domination, or distortion
of moral sentiments. It is therefore unsurprising that the most disadvantaged should lack self-respect or be aggressive, or that the rich should
be arrogant and patronising. Though both liberal and radical egalitarians
often find it difficult to acknowledge, if class damages, then this implies
that people themselves are damaged, often in ways which not only limit
their potential but may in extreme cases lead to anti-social behaviour.
Again, if they are indeed damaged then we cannot escape the negative
judgement of their behaviour and character, for if it wasnt a problem then
class could not be said to be damaging. Thus Left liberals face the difficulty of being both tough on anti-social behaviour and tough on its causes,
when being critical of the processes which generate class and gender differences is often (mistakenly) assumed to imply excusal of the behaviours
which they encourage and the suspension of the expectation of others to
act responsibly. Perhaps the most obvious example in Britain concerns
attitudes towards poor white working class males (Haylett, 2001).
In response to this kind of dilemma it is common for the behaviour
of oppressed groups to be either pathologised or patronised. Commenting on this dilemma in relation to working class families, Walkerdine
and Lucey write: This attempt to rescue, to make working-class families
equal but different, still denies oppression in a liberal endeavour to produce equality out of a misplaced pluralism (Walkerdine and Lucey, 1989,
p. 7; see also p. 192).25 Bourdieu (2000, pp. 756) talks about a similar
oscillation regarding popular culture: One cannot, in fact, without contradiction, describe (or denounce) the inhuman conditions of existence
that are imposed on some, and at the same time credit those who suffer them with the real fulfilment of human potentialities . . . As we saw
in chapter 5, we should also take note of the view from below of these
dilemmas, as dominated groups consider their injuries and disadvantages
relative to those above them, and often combine a reluctance to believe
that there has been anything inferior about the way they have lived (or
rather have been allowed to live) with a mixture of envy and resentment
of others.
In a commentary on John Steinbecks great novel The Grapes of Wrath,
Martha Nussbaum notes that while the impoverished migrants suffer a
25
As Haylett demonstrates, the idea that everyone is different but equal can also function
in the discourse of multiculturalism in a way that renders class as difference a very
congenial transposition for neoliberals (Haylett, 2001).
208
This can be hard to acknowledge because it could invite a most odious form of class contempt. I have recoiled from acknowledging it many
times in trying to write this chapter. It flies in the face of the relativist
tenor of popular (and some parts of academic) culture, and the reluctance to be judgemental, which of course is itself a moral sentiment.
The dread of appearing to regard the most oppressed people as intrinsically of lesser worth which is not what Nussbaum is arguing prevents
liberals and many self-professed egalitarians from confronting the true
shamefulness of the system of which they are ashamed. Despite its good
intentions, this is a superficial form of egalitarianism, one which seriously
underestimates the injuries of class.26 Working class pride in moral goodness has some justification, but extreme deprivation and inequalities are
more likely to inhibit rather than enhance those qualities, as we saw in
the case of the young men of the ghetto described by Wacquant (Bourdieu et al., 1999). Nussbaum makes an equivalent point about another
fictional character, this time a poor black criminal, noting that his real
criminality is a product of his rage and shame, which in turn is a product
of racism, not merely criminalisation in the sense of mislabelling and
false accusations. Thus qualified, the pathologies of oppression can better
be understood by recognising their objective existence and their causes.
This is not to deny any responsibility on the part of the oppressed for
their actions. People of any class are capable of and indeed do commit
crimes or wrongs, but the oppressed are often under additional social
pressures and deprivations that make such behaviour more likely. It is the
causes whether social or personal or both which are the proper object
of critical evaluation. Ironically the superficial egalitarianism contradicts
sociologys partly well-founded suspicion of notions of intrinsic individual
qualities. Pathologies are socially constructed, in a sense, but not only as
26
I am sure that, no matter how much I emphasise that the damage is a social product,
someone will accuse me of simple class contempt.
Responses to class II
209
a result of the performative character of the privileged gaze, moral boundary drawing and misrecognition, but by the objective effects of economic
insecurity, which are then sometimes correctly recognised and represented
by others, even though the social causes go unacknowledged. We have to
steer a course between exaggerations of such class injuries, which would
amount to class contempt, and idealisations of the Steinbeck kind, which
can easily become equivalent to noble savage ideologies.
It becomes easier to accept this argument if we realise that the pathologies of class and other inequalities are not limited to the poorest, and
there are no good reasons though plenty of bad ones for assuming
they have a monopoly of anti-social behaviour. At the same time, this
does not mean, of course, that life is as bad for the middle classes as
for the poor. But there are also deformations produced by positions of
dominance: a tendency to treat those below them in the class hierarchy as
if they were servants, beings whose feelings and time and autonomy are of
lesser importance than their own, indeed beings who are scarcely visible;
an inability to understand working class life or to see it as of any importance beyond something which might contain a few cultural goods which
might be appropriated; a confusion of wealth and achievement and moral
worth (see Lamont, 1992); an inability to understand how their own
wealth and ease depend on others or to see how their consumption takes
away resources from those who need and deserve them more. Commodity fetishism, to which the capitalist class is more susceptible than any
other, involves not so much an unawareness of the social relations of the
production, which can seem merely like an ignorance of Marxist economic theory, but an inability to understand the ethical implications of
the economic mechanisms of capitalism in terms of the arbitrary and
unequal relations between contribution (work), needs, merit and reward,
along with the unequal division of suffering and flourishing, insecurity
and security that they produce.27
Lamonts working class men are critical of what they see as managers
lack of integrity, sincerity and interpersonal skills (Lamont, 2000). This
is not merely a prejudice. There are good grounds for assuming this
representation has some justification: those in managerial positions, especially in capitalist business where the ultimate imperative is profit rather
than what is right or good,28 and where the competitive struggle against
peers is unrelenting and the environment constantly changing are likely
to become habituated to dissembling and opportunism, treating others
27
28
I know only too well that these points are likely to be contentious: they are the subject
of another forthcoming book, on moral economy.
Even where, contingently, the latter is a necessary condition for the former, it cannot be
the dominant goal if capitalist businesses are to survive.
210
purely as means to their ends, as they face continually changing and conflicting demands. As Robert Jackalls outstanding study of the (im)moral
lives of corporate managers shows with great force, the Hobbesian pressures facing managers render consistent moral behaviour a recipe for
failure (Jackall, 1988). Impression management, instrumentalism, accumulation of external rather than internal goods, avoidance of the weak,
ingratiation with the strong, appropriation of credit due to others, evasion of own responsibilities, and willingness to abandon commitments
all of these figure in the lives of the managers studied by Jackall. Obliged
to be dominant downwards, compliant upwards and competitive sideways, pragmatism and self-interest invariably overrule ethics, though at
personal cost for some: . . . guilt, a regret at self-abnegation and deprivation . . . alternating anxiety, rage, and self-disgust for willingly submitting
oneself to the knowing and not knowing, to the constant containment of
anger, to the keeping quiet, to the knuckling under . . . (Jackall, 1988,
p. 204). Meanwhile the petits bourgeois tend to suffer from anxiety and
contradictory tendencies of condescension, deference and resistance, and
self-repression, as we saw earlier (see also Bourdieu, 1984).29
In these and many other ways, class produces not only different access
to goods held to be desirable for all, not only incomplete or distorted
recognition, but also deformations of character which become part of the
habitus. Of course, the match between these characteristics and social
position is only approximate, because similar effects can be produced
by other mechanisms which do not simply align with class: gender produces its own effects, and all the contingencies of the psychology of interpersonal relations, especially those of family life, can produce virtues
and vices independently of class. Classed behaviours and experiences are
seamlessly fused with those of gender and other kinds of social divisions.
It may be difficult to change these behaviours because gender may be used
as a defence against class domination. The young working class women
studied by Skeggs saw feminism as threatening because their heavy investments in femininity had won them some respect. If they were to abandon
it they had no other forms of cultural capital to compensate for their low
class position (Skeggs, 1997). In a different way working class men may
use their masculinity to resist middle class domination.
This fusing of class and gender and ethnicity can also pose problems
for those who want to distinguish them in making judgements of their
own or others behaviour. Thus laddishness is a working class kind of
29
As Jackall notes, this anxiety of the upwardly mobile can be an asset for managerial work
since it encourages conscientiousness and attention to detail (Jackall, 1988, p. 21).
Responses to class II
211
masculinity but it is difficult to separate out the class from the gender
elements of it. How we judge people on one of these dimensions may
conflict with how we want to judge them on others. Thus a middle class
egalitarian may want to object to the sexism of a young working class man
but want to avoid snobbery, and indeed even want to act preferentially
towards him in relation to his class. Again this highlights the effects of
the objective differences between class and gender. But the working class
sexist may read this disapproval of his sexism in class terms, as evidence
of snobbery rather than as a legitimate criticism of his behaviour. That
he might well (mis)interpret it in this way is not surprising given that
awareness of sexism and feminism are likely to correlate positively with
position in the class hierarchy: one of the effects of class is that it gives
unequal access to emancipatory bodies of thought. Similar effects can
occur through the crossing of gender and ethnicity, as when feminists
worry that their disapproval of the gender relations of a different ethnic
group will be seen as racist.
Rather than simply glossing such complexities as evidence of lay
ambivalence or confusion about class, gender and ethnicity and leaving it at that, I suggest that we should probe what generates it, for there
are good reasons behind it. From a positive point of view, such a strategy may help to identify how people think about class, gender and race
(though of course that is also an empirical question), and from a normative point of view, it helps us think about how to go on in the face of such
complexities and contradictions.
Conclusion
Actors continually evaluate the behaviour of others, including that of class
others. Although, for the most part, they may take its causes for granted,
they sometimes try to explain it. Such explanations tend to reflect the
relative position of the observer (judge) and observed (judged) but they
may also be sincere attempts to understand rather than air prejudices.
In so doing they run into difficult issues of explanation and justification,
and attribution of responsibility, credit and blame, and fine distinctions
between judging behaviour, character and identity.
As regards views of class itself, the mixtures of self-justification, selfdeprecation, evasion and embarrassment are not only understandable
but partly justifiable responses. Class is morally problematic because of
its arbitrary relationship to worth, virtues and status, and this is why it
is a highly sensitive subject. Apologists would like to believe that class
is a reflection of moral and other virtues, such as effort, merit and
212
achievement (needs tend not come into the picture), though class is
likely to figure among the influences shaping these.30 While it is of course
important to acknowledge that everyone has some responsibility for their
actions and life courses, it is important, first, not to expect too much
through inattention to the powerful social forces which enable and constrain everything we do, indeed everything we become. Secondly, it is
important to remember that people become classed from birth, and their
most formative years are spent under the influence of these social forces
when their autonomy is at its most limited. Far too many discussions of
class ignore this simple fact.
The defensiveness of the middle classes about class is not necessarily
a matter merely of justifying their class position, but of defending their
moral worth, regardless of their class position. Attitudes to class itself
show both a temptation to invoke moral distinctions on class lines and
unease about the morality of class. Some of the these distinctions can
claim some empirical verification the most oppressed are indeed likely
to develop anti-social behaviour, just as the dominant are likely to develop
callous and oppressive behaviour. To the extent that there is also any
awareness that these moral differences are products of their involuntary
occupancy of class positions, it is likely to generate unease.
Class inequalities generate shame among the most disadvantaged.
Egalitarians, whatever their class origin, may also feel a less personalised
shame about class itself, and quite properly so. As we saw in chapter 6,
shame is not merely a product of external disapproval but usually involves
the internalisation of and commitment to standards according to which
we have failed. Even the advantaged may occasionally recognise instances
of their complicity in the reproduction of undeserved inequalities and
feel guilty. On the other hand the euphemisms of working and middle
class themselves allow complicity between those who acknowledge the
existence of class difference but want to deny that people are of unequal
worth and those who want to maintain inequalities and unequal treatment and welcome their partial concealment. Class is quite properly an
unsettling subject, one that prompts feelings of shame as well as selfjustification. We are shamed by class because it is shameful (see also
Ehrenreich, 2001).
30
As a function of simply being human, moral worth might be said to be unconditional and
unaffected by class. However, from a positive point of view, as we have argued, moral
character or virtues and vices are indeed influenced by class and other social relations.
This is not an indictment of individuals but of the social structures and discourses
shaping them.
There are two types of conclusions and implications that I want to discuss. The first concern theoretical and philosophical matters, particularly
about valuation, values and the relationship between positive and normative thought. This is warranted because both the subject matter and the
approach that I have taken to it have been somewhat unorthodox. I have
sought to understand lay normativity in relation to class, attempting to
take it seriously and appreciate its internal force, instead of ignoring it
or reducing it to a correlate of social position or discursive construction.
While it has been a primarily positive analysis of lay normativity, at times
it has itself been more openly normative about that subject matter than
is usual in social science, and I will add further normative judgements
in this last chapter. In the first part I therefore want both to defend the
approach to normativity that I have taken and to suggest how normative
evaluations such as those I have made might be justified. This involves
challenging common views about the assumed subjective nature of valuation, the distinction between positive and normative discourse and the
relation between them, and the kinds of grounds that we might appeal
to when justifying normative judgements. On all these matters I owe the
reader some explanations.
In the second part I address more substantive matters and restate the
case for understanding the moral significance of class. In addition, from
a normative point of view, I attempt to answer the question which the
whole book has begged: can anything be done about class inequalities
and the forms of misrecognition and discrimination that go with them?
Here we confront one of the possible reasons why so many societies are
in denial about class that many believe that it is inescapable, and that
it is a price we have to pay for the alleged benefits of capitalism. I shall
argue that we do not have to accept this fatalism.
Philosophical/methodological issues
People look to philosophy for the knockdown argument and the decisive refutation, but ethics, being bound up with people, cannot escape soft-edged
213
214
psychology, all dispositions and tendencies rather than hard universal laws.
(Glover, 2001, p. 27)
. . . the error of the sceptical opponent of practical reason consists in remaining
too much in the grip of the very picture of rational argument that is allegedly
being criticized. (Nussbaum, 1993, p. 235)
In chapter 1 I noted how, over the last 200 years, social science has slowly
shifted from blending the normative and the positive seamlessly, to a
situation where normative thought has been largely expelled from social
science, and ghettoised in political and moral philosophy. This process
was accompanied by an expulsion of reason (or science) from values, so
that values and valuation now tend to be thought of as subjective at
the least as having nothing to do with understanding and explanation,
and at worst as a contaminant threatening the objectivity of science. Of
course, this has not made social science value-free, but it has successfully
marginalised normative thought as a worthy activity in its own right. A
side effect of this has been that social science has been ill equipped to
understand lay normativity.
A prime concern of this book has been to illuminate the normative, particularly moral or ethical dimensions and implications of beliefs, actions,
practices, institutions and social structures. These are without doubt deep
and murky waters that one hesitates to enter, but making normative judgements is a condition of being able to live, so social science can only evade
these issues at the cost of misunderstanding society. This usually happens
through various kinds of identification error or misattribution of causality
in which actions that derive from ethical dispositions and decisions are
treated as purely interest- or power-determined responses. Alternatively,
normativity and values are seen as merely subjective, or conventional
and habitual, and hence lacking warrant.
Those who see values simply as subjective often slide between three
different and contingently related senses of this term. Subjective may
mean firstly value-laden, secondly, pertaining to subjects, and thirdly,
untrue or not necessarily true (Sayer, 2000a; Collier, 2003). There are
equivalent, opposite, senses for objective. Not all subjective ideas need
be value-laden in a non-trivial sense; we may be indifferent about many
things. Values and judgements are clearly subjective in the second sense
since they are held and made by knowing subjects. But values and judgements are also about something; they pertain to objects either something
independent of the subject or, as in internal conversations, the subjects
own thoughts and feelings, which can be treated as objects of reflection.
Imagine we have two identical objects, say two copies of this book; it
would make no sense to say that one of them was good, while the other
215
was not. How could they be if they were exactly the same? There must be
something different about them such that we think they should be valued
differently. The simple philosophical point here is that valuation cannot
be purely subjective in the second sense, but has also to relate to the
properties of its objects. So valuation has both subjective and objective
aspects, in fact it involves a relation between the two.
When this objective side is pointed out, some people tend to assume
that we are claiming that valuation is objective in the quite different sense
of involving true statements. But objectivity in the sense of pertaining to
objects does not entail this, indeed the fallibility of knowledge and truth
claims derives from the very independence of objects from what we think
about them. We can only be mistaken if there is something independent
of our thought to be mistaken about. If the objective is collapsed into the
subjective, so that there is nothing outside knowledge or discourse, then
these must be infallible. So, far from implying privileged access to the
truth, the insistence on the objective or object-related dimension of valuation renders fallibility comprehensible (Sayer, 2000a; Collier, 2003).
Of course where ethical judgements are concerned, the fuzziness of the
objects makes their adequacy particularly difficult to assess, as the quotation above from Jonathan Glover notes. Hence, too, the significance of
the quotation from Martha Nussbaum.
We are accustomed to thinking of knowledge in terms of a straightforward distinction between the positive and the normative. In positive
thought, we assume that if our ideas fail to fit the world, we should change
them to fit the world. By contrast, in normative thought, when we perceive a mismatch between our thinking and how the world seems to be,
we assume that the world needs to be changed to fit our ideas (Helm,
2001). So positive thought is world-guided, and normative thought
world-guiding. But the positive/normative distinction hides an excluded
middle, a zone of concepts which are simultaneously positive and normative. Some of the most important phenomena of life are only identifiable
from within this zone: needs, desire, lack, flourishing and suffering, including their specific forms such as fulfilment, health, illness,
oppression and disrespect. Such concepts have both descriptive and
evaluative content, indeed the two cannot be separated. Lack, needs and
desires are not merely markers of the difference between the ideas of an
outside observer and the world, but part of the world which strives to
go beyond the state of the world at any given time. In recognising needs
I simultaneously adjust my thinking to the world and (ceteris paribus)
think that the world ought to be changed to meet them. At the same
time, remembering Nussbaums point, we should not expect judgements
regarding needs, lack and desire to be infallible. The relationship between
216
what we feel we lack and desire and what will actually satisfy us is something we may struggle to discover. It is not an apodictic relationship and
it would be absurd to expect it to be.
Some may want to argue that a separation of positive and normative
discourse can and should be achieved by replacing value-laden terms
with more neutral, positive language. But if we try to do this two things
are likely to happen. One possibility is that the new terminology would
take on the same or similar normative load as the old terminology.
The other possibility is that in recasting descriptions in neutral terms
we would mis-describe the object. This is because the positive and normative content of descriptions are not necessarily inversely related. Consider the following famous example, comparing two statements about
the Holocaust: thousands died in the Nazi concentration camps and
thousands were systematically exterminated in the Nazi concentration
camps. The second is both more value-laden and more factually accurate than the first: the prisoners did not just die naturally, nor were they
killed randomly and individually, but according to planned mass executions. Therefore, refraining from using evaluative terms may weaken
rather than strengthen the descriptive adequacy or truth status of our
accounts.
This tells us something about the relationship between beliefs that are
subjective in the sense of value-laden and their objectivity in the sense of
their truth status. Value-ladenness and truth are not necessarily inversely
related, hence neutrality is not the same thing as objectivity in this sense.
This means that it is a mistake to regard values as a contaminant threatening the objectivity (i.e., truth, practical adequacy) of social science,
which we must root out or at least minimise. Using terms like arrogant,
condescending, vain, oppressive or humiliating in describing social
behaviour need not be a problem. We may sometimes use them mistakenly, but then we can also be mistaken in our choice of non-evaluative
descriptions.
Many philosophers from Hume onwards have argued that we cannot
logically deduce an ought from an is, and that to imagine that we can is
to fall foul of the naturalistic fallacy.1 Even the statement X is starving
does not logically entail the statement X should be fed. At one level it is
indeed fallacious to imagine that an is statement logically entails an ought
statement. But in the realm of practice, in terms of the relation between
circumstances and practices, then other things being equal, it would be
bizarre to deny X food when we could easily give them it. But then logic
is just about the relations between statements, not circumstances and
1
217
practices. When I feel hungry my desire to eat does not require a logical
warrant.
However, from the point of view of the hazards of social science, the
problem is not that of inferring ought from is, but rather the reverse,
insofar as we run the risk of wishful thinking (Bhaskar, 1979). But this is
a possibility, not an inevitability. We can acknowledge unpalatable facts.
Being open in making evaluative judgements does not entail that we will
be mistaken in our positive descriptions. If, nevertheless, I have indeed
been guilty of wishful thinking I ask critics to point out the instances of
this instead of merely complaining about the intrusion of values.
This view of normativity in social science and its objects is clearly
at odds with what Habermas termed the crypto-normative approach
that has been popular in social science under the influence of poststructuralism. This both implies and yet refuses to provide justifications
for critical evaluations of its objects of study; for example, the oppressive
nature of certain representations and discourses is implied but just why
they are oppressive is not clearly explained, perhaps because of an associated fear that claiming that people are harmed involves imputing essential properties to people, and making claims to truth. It also involves a
distanced and deflational view of lay actors moral concerns. Curiously,
normative judgements by social scientists are seen as threatening as
potentially authoritarian rather than merely, as has been intended in this
book, as an invitation to others to join in a discussion. The irony is that,
as both Hitler and Mussolini declared explicitly, relativism allows tyrants
free rein to impose their will on others, come what may (Sayer, 2000a).
By contrast, in sticking our necks out and making normative judgements,
we expose ourselves to critique.
Crypto-normative approaches are also crypto-positive, in that they sacrifice descriptive richness through their refusal of normative judgements.
In evading judging whether something causes suffering or flourishing we
miss important positive information. To be told, on the one hand, as is
surely correct, that power can be constructive as well as destructive, without attempting to identify in which cases it is one and in which it is the
other (in some it may be both, but then we need to know in what ways
and respects), is to deny ourselves important information about what is
happening. Resistance and transgression are not necessarily good, nor are
conservatism and conformity necessarily bad. Their significance depends
on whether they contribute to flourishing or suffering, and these are not
merely boo-hooray words but descriptions of what happens. Similarly
to say, defensively, as Foucault did, that it is not that everything is bad,
but that everything is dangerous, is merely another kind of evasion of the
unavoidability of the normative in everyday life and social science, and
218
one which may deny us positive knowledge about what happens as well as
discriminations between better and worse (Foucault, 1983, pp. 2312).
I reject also the kind of radical idealism which assumes that the struggle
for recognition is purely a matter of representation, projection, othering
and power-play, unrelated to the qualities people actually have, or which
reduces those qualities to mere discursive constructions. Refusing to distinguish between fair or adequate representations and misrepresentations
renders the struggle for respect merely a matter of power-play in which no
injustice can ever be done, since representations are simply voluntaristic
products of the spectator and are neither fair nor unfair.2 Projection of
undesirable characteristics onto the other is of course an important element of some antagonistic social relations, but what is significant about it
is that it produces misrepresentations of the others actual characteristics.
Idealist accounts that treat all pathological behaviours of the dominated
as existing in the eye of the prejudiced beholder, as if they could not exist
independently of this gaze or construction, have a superficial appeal
insofar as they avoid blaming the victims of class and other forms of
undeserved inequality for their situation. But to some extent the negative
qualities attributed by the spectators do exist and to imagine otherwise is
to ignore the social mechanisms producing them, as if class were merely
a product of prejudice.
A qualified ethical naturalism
Having dealt with the usual way of approaching the relation between
social science and normative matters in terms of subjectivity and values, I now want to elaborate the approach to ethics that has been implicit
in the foregoing chapters. This might be termed a qualified ethical naturalism. It is ethically naturalist in that it considers that the very meaning
of good or bad cannot be determined without reference to the nature of
human social being.3 As a first cut, we can say that the meaning of good
and bad ultimately relates to human4 needs and to human capacities for
flourishing or suffering. This is not merely a matter of values or subjective opinion, or of pleasure and pain, for it concerns objective matters
objective in the sense of independent of what particular observers happen to think. Class matters because it creates unequal possibilities for
flourishing and suffering.
2
3
4
On the perils of idealism and strong versions of social constructionism, see Sayer, 2000a,
chapters 2 and 4.
[E]thics must be grounded in a knowledge of human beings that enables us to say that
some modes of life are suited to our nature, whereas others are not (Wood, 1990, p. 17).
I accept that we could extend this to other species capable of flourishing and suffering.
219
This also tends to involve an upward reduction of the biological to the social through
a denial of ontological stratification and emergence. Another component is a dogmatic
anti-essentialism, which typically argues, illogically, that because gender and identity have
no essence, nothing has any essence, and which imagines that to impute essences to things
is to deny that they can change or assume different contingent forms according to their
associated accidental properties (Sayer, 2000a).
220
qualities not available to most species or objects and so are not entirely
independent of any naturalistic preconditions. Socialisation cannot possibly go all the way down, as Rorty argued and sociological imperialism
implies, for socialisation presupposes an organic body with particular
powers and susceptibilities not possessed by objects, like planks of wood,
which cannot be socialised (Geras, in Archer, 2000, p. 41). Bodies can
be socially modified but always within limits. This qualified ethical naturalism attempts to accommodate both the wondrous variety of human
cultural forms and elements which seem to be common to all (Nussbaum, 1993).6 While there are universal human needs these are always
culturally mediated though within limits and in addition there are
wholly culturally produced (but naturally enabled) needs. This capacity
for considerable cultural diversity is an essential feature of human beings,
involving issues as fundamental as sexual identity, and cosmology. Thus,
cultural variety presupposes a kind of universalism, though not one that
produces uniformity (Collier, 2003).
Strong versions of social constructionism collapse the difference
between understandings and what they are about or of, and hence can
make no sense of the fallibility of beliefs, for they assume that what is
thought, must be, so that understandings always successfully construct
the world as they imagine, and social wishful thinking always works. (The
opposite idea the belief that ideas can be perfect reflections of the world
is little better.) Of course, cultural practices do construct or attempt to
construct social life in their own image, but how far they are successful
depends on how they relate to the properties of the objects they manipulate and address, including people, which are not the product of wishful
thinking but are other.
While it might seem easy to accept that cultures can be wrong about
human physical capacities for flourishing (for example, promoting foods
that cause heart disease), it is perhaps harder to accept this might be true
of the more culturally autonomous practices of the kind referred to in
(3), which seem to be more self-confirming. Cultural discourses include
commentaries on what is good for us, and to the extent that conformity
to such beliefs helps one be accepted as a member of a community, their
claims have a self-fulfilling character: those who conform may flourish
more than those who rebel.7 But such discourses may be deeply ideological, encouraging the oppressed to embrace their position as worthy, for
example, encouraging women to value subservience to men. At the same
6
7
It is interesting that the beliefs and practices of ancient Greece can, without contradiction,
be drawn upon to illustrate both points.
This would be an example of a local optimum position which was inferior to a higher
optimum which was more inclusive.
221
time, discourses, belief systems or cultures are usually rich enough to provide ways of questioning their own beliefs. Thus, one doesnt have to be
a non-westerner to see that many western beliefs about what constitutes
flourishing are mistaken. The complexity, unevenness and (increasing)
openness of real societies invite actors to compare situations of relative
flourishing with other situations of oppression and to question why what
is possible in one sphere is not in another; for example, why values of
equality have not been extended more to gender relations. Again, the
fallibility of any discourse, practice or social construction is a product
of the independence or otherness of the materials (including personal,
social and discursive materials) from the concepts their users may have
of them, and this otherness can often be detected.
However, to acknowledge the fallibility of popular conceptions of the
good and of morality is not to suppose that there is only one best way
of living. There is no inconsistency in arguing both that cultural, including moral, values are fallible, and that different cultures can nevertheless provide different but equally successful forms of flourishing (Nussbaum, 1999; Collier, 2003). While it is difficult to compare different
cultures, translation and intercultural communication give the lie to a
priori assumptions of incommensurability. Such assumptions are as dogmatic as the assumption that there are no significant differences among
cultures. Just how much difference and similarity there is among them
is an empirical question, and existing evidence suggests both extraordinary differences and overlaps and similarities (Nussbaum, 1993, 1999).
The plurality of possible forms of flourishing (and suffering) is likely
to go beyond those currently and historically experienced. In developing new ways of living, people can acquire new cultural emergent powers, and discover new ways of flourishing and suffering. Thus ethics
(both descriptive and prescriptive) must allow a creative dimension, albeit
not creation out of nothing, as if it meant denying any kind of natural
limits and enablements, as seems to be implied in some of Foucaults
work (Foucault, 2000), but creation through the use and development
of existing materials. There therefore need be no conflict between an
ethics of authenticity and an ethics of creativity.8 We learn as best we can
what is objectively possible and what objectively expands human flourishing through social experimentation. That such social experiments,
such as those of Talibanism, state socialism or global neoliberalism,
8
It is not only absurd to call, as Foucault does, for an ethic of creativity that is not based on
truth about desire, life, nature or body (Foucault, 2000, p. 262), as if these would prevent
creativity and new discoveries; it is also dangerous to call for an ethics which disregards
the affordances and limits of human social being.
222
can go horribly wrong is precisely in keeping, rather than in contradiction, with the idea that what constitutes human flourishing is an objective matter in the strong sense, that is, partly independent of social
construction.
This is not to underestimate the difficulty of assessing what constitutes
flourishing or suffering, but we can make some discriminations between
them. Clearly it requires us to assess what human social being involves and
what is distinctive about it. Thus, given the human capacity for agency
and creativity and the need for stimulation, all people have not only certain basic needs regarding beings (such as being well fed and healthy),
but also a need for access to diverse activities or doings (Sen, 1992). As
Aristotle argued, flourishing is assisted by full, active use of capacities
which is why the deprivations of prison really do damage people so that
the more enjoyable activities and the more desirable pleasures arise in
connection with the exercise of greater abilities involving more complex
discriminations (Rawls, 1971, p. 426n). Our class position profoundly
influences our access to these kinds of flourishing.
As social beings, the extent to which particular individuals flourish or
suffer depends on their relationship to others, on social structures and
embedded distributions of power which enable, constrain, and provide
interpretations of, their lives. Some individuals or groups may flourish
at the expense of others or may suffer in ways that help others flourish.
In other words, there may be localised possibilities for flourishing for
some, which, though better than some alternatives, are inferior to other
social arrangements that allow flourishing to be more of a positive-sum
game. The ideal would be a society in which the flourishing of all is
the condition of the flourishing of each individual. However, the very
existence of local secondary optima, and material conditions such as the
spatial segregation of the dominant and the oppressed, reduce pressures
to work towards more inclusively beneficial forms of social organisation.
One of the impediments to better forms of society is the fact that the
eudaimonistic impulse can be met tolerably well from the point of view
of peoples well-being locally, and sometimes at the expense of others
who are, or are imagined to be, remote.
While people can flourish or suffer and have a strong sense of the
difference, the possibilities for living well depend less on the practicaladequacy of their beliefs and dispositions and more on social structure
and the distribution of power. Similarly, the likelihood of their acting
virtuously depends on whether the institutional contexts in which they
live encourage or discourage this. In generally abstracting from these
structures moral philosophy shares with commonsense thinking an individualistic cast so that the force of its normative arguments is addressed
223
For example, see Peter Singers discussion of ethical responses to poverty (Singer, 1993).
224
Class in the broad sense used in everyday life, and in the sense used by
Bourdieu, is reproduced through a wide range of relations and processes:
economic, cultural, social, including more specific educational and linguistic processes. While the economic mechanisms of capitalism per se
are not, in practice, the sole generators of class, they could reproduce
class inequalities even without the contributions of other (non-capitalist)
economic mechanisms, or cultural and social mechanisms, such as those
of gender and status. Class is therefore both structural to capitalism,
yet contingently co-determined by many non-capitalist influences, as
explained in chapter 4.
Having once been the fundamental source and subject of conflict in
the political culture of capitalism, class inequality is now the problem
that dare not speak its name.10 Whereas racism and increasingly sexism
10
Radical Egalitarianism is now the orphan of a defunct socialism. The unruly and abandoned child of the liberal enlightenment had been taken in by socialism in the midnineteenth century. Protected and overshadowed by its new foster parent, radical egalitarianism was relieved of the burden of arguing its own case: as socialisms foster child,
equality would be the by-product of an unprecedented post-capitalist order, not something to be defended morally and promoted politically on its own terms in the world as
it is . . . It thus fell to reformists, be they laborist, social democratic, Eurocommunist
or New Deal, to make capitalism liveable for workers and the less well off, a task they
accomplished with remarkable success in the advanced economies. But in the process
the egalitarian project was purged of its utopian yearnings for a world of equal freedom
and dignity, and narrowed to the pursuit of a more equal distribution of goods. (Bowles
and Gintis, 1998, p. 361.)
225
11
This is not to say this term has no use: it is more appropriate for the situation of ethnic
minorities, for instance. As regards class, social exclusion is more of a response than a
cause.
226
sentiments such as joy, pride and shame are universal. Subjective experience in general, and that of class in particular, makes little sense in
abstraction from moral sentiments, from individuals monitoring of their
own and others behaviour, and from the approval or disapproval they
receive. Dispositions and motives relating to others are typically mixed,
combining self-interest and othering with more moral sentiments of
benevolence, compassion and justice. It is in virtue of the latter that anyone cares about othering and inequality. Inequalities are experienced
not merely as matters of differences in tastes or forms of aversion towards
others (though these are important), but in the pursuit of goods, including valued ways of life and recognition. The struggles of the social field
are about not only the distribution of power, rights and responsibilities,
resources and recognition, and goods and bads, but their very definition
and evaluation.
Equality of recognition is now a prominent theme in mainstream
politics, at least at the level of rhetoric. According to Britains New
Labour, everyone is recognised as of equal worth, yet New Labour policies
have achieved little in countering the inequalities in distribution which
make such claims ring hollow. Like many governments New Labour has
exploited the illusion that the politics of recognition can replace, instead
of complementing, the politics of distribution. It is as if, at least at the
level of rhetoric and style, rejecting snobbery, sexism, homophobia and
racism will be sufficient to bring about a fairer society. It is also tempting
for the comfortably-off to go along with the idea one that has taken
root in popular feelgood culture that the dominated can be helped
by encouraging them to have more self-esteem, as if, by an act of social
levitation, they can free themselves from their lowly position, and without any redistribution of resources to them. At the level of style, New
Labour avoids the upper class, elitist associations of Conservatism, but
its economic policies are primarily a continuation of neoliberalism rather
than a rejection (Jessop, 2002).
The evasion of class and the illusion of meritocracy encourage moralising policies such as government workfare programmes which effectively
pathologise individuals by holding them responsible for class disadvantages, hardening resentment in the process. Thus, New Labours preferred discourse of social exclusion has a moral element, one whose
superficial compassionate tone barely conceals an attribution of responsibility for their situation to the excluded themselves (Fairclough, 2000,
pp. 5165). Similarly, the popularity of policies calling upon communities (itself a telling euphemism for class and race) to mobilise their
social capital stems partly from the fact that they involve bootstrapping rather than redistribution of economic capital. In an interesting
227
discussion of class, gender and New Labour, Cora Kaplan argues that
New Labour wants to make class an obsolete category, not by attacking
inequality, but by personifying class in terms of the working class associated with old Labour and Britains disappearing industrial history, and
its imagery of old, male manual workers imbued with solidaristic rather
than individualistic values. Class has become a censored term . . . not to
be mentioned lest it call up or produce old antagonisms (Kaplan, 2003,
p. 3). An open and critical approach to class is feared as it would imply
alliances with groups New Labour has helped to pathologise, and risks
alienating middle England.12 Instead of challenging class, it diplomatically accommodates to it.
As with other social divisions like that of gender, one of the most revealing questions about class is What should we do about it? This forces us
beyond a vague, unfocused, negative feeling about the subject, which is
what so-called critical social science typically produces, and makes us
identify what exactly is problematic about it. Greater equality would be a
significant improvement in itself, but as we have argued earlier equalisation is not enough. We have sooner or later to ask: equality with respect to
what reference point?; the lifestyles of a particular class, or by reference
to some other conception of the good?
Regarding gender, I argued that the simple association of a particular
characteristic or behaviour with men or women did not in itself make
it good or bad. To argue otherwise would be to appeal to dual standards (Annas, 1993). Thus an anti-social, repressive form of behaviour
would not become less bad if it was differently gendered, or distributed in
gender-neutral fashion. The appropriate response to situations in which
goods (whether objects, behaviours or institutions) are monopolised by
particular groups is to enable equal access to them. The appropriate
response to situations in which bads are unequally distributed is to
eliminate them, not distribute them more equally. There may also be
necessary evils bads unavoidably connected to goods; these should
obviously be more equally distributed. To be sure, we can never expect
to create a world in which access to goods and exposure to necessary
evils is perfectly equalised, but there is no good reason why a particular class or group should shoulder the burden of necessary evils such as
unpleasant kinds of work. This simple rule regarding the universalisation
of the good need not imply lack of attention to difference; it is compatible
with recognising different needs for example, those of the disabled
and different forms of flourishing for example, different sexualities as
12
The term middle England not only excludes the rest of the UK but is a euphemism for
middle class.
228
part of the good, but we cannot evade the question of the legitimacy of
differences. We can pursue this question not in order to stamp out difference but rather to embrace good or innocuous differences. We have to
make at least some judgements on what is good regardless of its social
distribution in order to make decisions on the politics of distribution and
recognition. This is now recognised as regards gender (Fraser, 1997).13
However, the equivalent message has yet to be grasped as regards class,
perhaps because of an inability to distinguish the posh from the good,
which results in middle class lifestyles being taken as the norm.14
I appreciate that it is tempting to evade questions of the good and
merely argue for a levelling up to the position of the better-off. Leftleaning liberal responses tend to do this. It seems an attractive proposal
for it offers the promise of eliminating poverty apparently without others having to make significant sacrifices. New Labour has had its own
version, in which getting the poor into work through the workfare state
is imagined to be sufficient to solve the problems of social exclusion
(Marquand, 1998). There are many possible arguments against this, both
in terms of its feasibility and its desirability. Here are just three regarding
its desirability.
First, it could be argued that some of the goods enjoyed by the dominant were too expensive in terms of the sacrifices made by others to produce them. The rich do not merely have more goods than the poor, they
command vastly more of others labour in the production of the goods
and services they consume than do other contributors to the division of
labour. And as even the neoliberal Hayek acknowledges, differences in
incomes in market economies have more to do with luck than merit. To
question their wealth is partly to question their disproportionate dependence on the labour of others, and hence whether society can afford the
rich. A policy of reducing inequality would imply a shift in the division
of labour towards servicing the consumption of hitherto poorer groups,
so that fewer workers would produce luxury goods and more would produce basic and middling goods. Second, studies of happiness in relation to
wealth show that above a basic level, increases in wealth make little difference to happiness. Friendships, recognition, love and satisfying work are
13
14
The need to go beyond simple notions of equality in terms of resources and address
questions of the good is also recognised in the capabilities and functionings approaches
pioneered in development studies by Sen and Nussbaum (Sen, 1992, 1999; Nussbaum,
2000; Feminist Economics, 2003).
As Julia Annas notes, its hard to imagine complete de-gendering in the pursuit of the
good, but that should not stop us pursuing piecemeal changes in that direction (Annas,
1993). In principle, I dont find complete abolition of class differences so hard to imagine,
though for practical reasons, as I explain below, it is hard to imagine.
229
more important (Lane, 1991). The pursuit of wealth as a source of happiness is illusory. Third, given current unsustainable levels of consumption,
there are ecological grounds for choosing a moderate level of wealth to
equalise around. The rich are the least ecologically sound social group.
And combining the second and third points, it can be further argued that
frugality (not poverty) need not mean compromising happiness.
These arguments do not amount to an agenda of levelling down or
equalising misery, as opponents of egalitarianism are wont to argue. On
the contrary, the approach of this book implies a levelling up, only not
by reference to the rich and powerful but by reference to the good. As we
have noted, there are many conceptions of the good, and many ways of
flourishing, but not just any form of social organisation promotes them
or enables equal access to them, and there are still more ways of suffering
or incomplete, uneven flourishing. Refusing the liberal priority of the
right over the good need not be a recipe for authoritarian imposition of
a particular conception of the good, but rather a challenge to make the
question of the good central to public deliberation.
There is a different and more fundamental objection to a radical egalitarian politics of distribution and recognition as regards class, namely
that class is structural to capitalism, and in the demonstrable absence
of superior alternatives to capitalism, we therefore have to accept class
inequality. One rather tired response is to acknowledge that state socialism indeed failed, but claim that real socialism has still not been tried.
Although I respect the aspirations, this is a feeble response because of
the repeated failure to institute such a system: if it is so superior, why
has it not been put into practice successfully? As I have argued elsewhere
(Sayer, 1995), the principal problem of real socialism/communism is
that, however much we might wish it were not so, neither democracy nor
central planning nor networking can cope with the intractability of the
kind of complex division of labour that an advanced economy requires.
Markets though not on the same scale as at present, and with greater
regulation are required to coordinate at least significant parts of this
division of labour. This might be compatible with a significant role for
worker-owned enterprises producing for markets, though, as yet, forms of
organisation and support for such enterprises (and complementary regulation of capitalist enterprises) which can make them successful on an
extensive scale have not been developed (Bardhan and Roemer, 1993).
Many will argue that globalisation makes an egalitarian politics of distribution within single countries more difficult, by increasing the linkages
between rich and poor globally, and producing de-industrialisation. However, whether this leads to widening or narrowing inequalities on a global
scale depends on the form of globalisation and the way it is regulated.
230
231
parental choice (in practice always limited, unequal and liable to produce
perverse effects) exacerbates the tendency for educational achievement
to be dependent on cultural capital.15
Neoliberals might argue that inequality is a price worth paying for
alleged benefits in terms of economic growth and success. However,
empirical research shows that there is little or no relationship between
the economic performance of nations and the degree of income inequality within them (Glyn and Miliband, 1994). They might also say that
very high incomes are necessary for motivating the most talented people
who will supposedly make companies successful. But this is to rationalise
what is no more than the exercise of power. They pay themselves such
incomes not because it is justified or necessary but because they can.
Companies have succeeded in the past and still do in other countries
with lower executive pay, and there is no reason why they could not do
so in the future. The extent to which pay premiums motivate people
to work harder and better varies according to cultural as well as economic differences: it is both an empirical question and a normative one.
Again, research on happiness analysed by Lane (1991) suggests that while
many are indeed motivated by pay, it fails to bring them the benefits they
imagine.
It would of course be naive to suppose that ethical arguments are ever
sufficient to bring about political change, but politics without ethical guidance is directionless and prone to repression rather than emancipation.
Cases need to be made for progressive income tax, for greater inheritance
tax, for limits on the mobility of capital, for a liveable minimum wage, for
reduced working hours, for equality between men and women and different ethnic groups, for approaching education in terms of better systems
rather than individual choice, and for many other policies bearing upon
mechanisms that reproduce class and other inequalities. There are difficult moral economic arguments to be made here which demonstrate that,
often, what allows us apparently to pursue our self-interest is not actually in our interests or favourable to social well-being. Clearly the cases
need to be made at international levels as well as national, for many such
policies cannot hope to be successful without international economic and
social policy agreements to stop them being undermined by competition
from more liberalised economies. I do not underestimate the difficulties
of such a strategy, but it could substantially reduce class inequalities and
15
Aldridge (2004) reports that the odds of a child from a middle class background making
it into the middle class in adulthood as opposed to the working class relative to the
same odds for a working class child are of the order of 15:1 across modern societies.
232
17
As Anne Phillips argues, while there might be arguments against complete inequality
among individuals, there are no good grounds for inequalities between men and women
(Phillips, 1999).
Even if it were to be argued that they had different genetic endowments, this in itself
would provide no justification for the differential treatment that results from class
inequalities.
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Index
243
244
Index
class, concepts of
abstract 71, 724, 75, 82, 91, 93
Bourdieus 71, 7686
concrete 71, 724, 75, 77
contested 75
lay 70, 71, 745, 91
Marxist 72, 73n. 3, 85, 86
relational 80
sociological 71, 745, 82
Weberian 73
Cobb, Jonathan 16
Cockburn, Cynthia 84
cognitive capacities 118
Collier, Andrew 214, 215, 220, 221
commitments 3942, 102, 133n. 34
difference from preferences 401
and struggle 41, 12633
common, the 108, 123, 177
compassion 1478
competition, see struggles of the social
field
condescension 148, 165, 171, 1745
structural 175
consumption 116, 120, 161, 228
contempt 152; see also class contempt
Coole, Diane 68
cosmopolitanism 183
critical realism 25n. 4, 33, 1912
critical theory 18, 111, 140
cultural goods 219
culturalism 92, 94, 172
cultural omnivore 172
cultural variation 10, 37, 56, 63, 104, 151,
159, 220, 221
culture 38, 47, 76, 90, 219
fallibility of 220, 221
popular 13
working class 120
Day, Gary 92
deference 13, 62, 172, 175, 176
dependence 203, 228
desert 70, 203; see also merit
desire see lack
difference 52, 53, 227
and conformity 1024
different but equal 1023, 119
dignity 155, 176
discourse(s) 7, 289, 33, 38, 44, 47, 76,
159, 220, 225
dispositions 24, 25
distribution 5269, 121, 22832
politics of 13, 52, 638, 224
see also recognition
division of labour 85, 118
Index
flourishing 11, 18, 34, 147, 151, 199,
21824
Foucault, Michel 221, 221n. 8
Fraser, Nancy 18, 52, 53, 176
Frow, John 31n.10, 92n.24
gender 8, 1315, 41, 489, 66, 71, 78,
122, 125, 135, 170
and normativity 165, 200
relation to class 17, 814, 86, 87, 8890,
92, 157, 177, 21011, 230
Geras, Norman 43, 152
Gintis, Herbert 200n. 16, 224n. 10
globalisation 229
Glover, Jonathan 214
good, the, and the bad 10, 194
conceptions of 8, 104, 116, 137, 227
struggles over 23, 42
goods 20, 678, 95, 10417
distribution of 11721, 227
external 11122
internal 11122
positional 108
struggles over 103
Griswold, Charles 146, 178n. 10
guilt 154
habitus 1819, 2251, 80, 105, 125, 128,
135
change in 25, 30
as classifying mechanism 24, 34
defined 23
divided 26, 101
and habitat 30
and meaning 278
not deterministic 24, 34
and rational action 2930
as summarising concept 27n. 7, 50
and taste 118
Harre, Rom 155
Hayek, Friedrich 66, 148, 204n. 22, 228
Haylett, Chris 207n. 25
Hegel, G. W. F. 8n. 4, 54, 55
master/slave dialectic 56, 66
Hobbes, Thomas 98
Honneth, Axel 5, 18, 54, 60, 61, 65, 67,
201
hooks, bell 13, 176
human nature 31, 32, 32n. 12, 35, 38, 55,
57, 194, 219, 222
and vulnerability 36, 38, 54, 147, 218
humiliation 37, 1612
idealism 11
identity 26, 39, 42, 53, 54, 58
245
identity-neutral and identity-sensitive
mechanisms 14, 71, 8593, 169
immoral sentiments, see moral sentiments
inequality
degrees of economic 2301
naturalisation of 48
types of 523
inheritance 86
injustice, see justice
instrumental and non-instrumental action
3940, 55, 100, 101, 1045
intellectuals 183, 199, 21824
interest 68, 98, 101, 201
internal conversations 22, 29, 101
Irwin, Sarah 86
Jackall, Robert 210
justice 99, 148, 150, 201
belief in a just world 204
Kaplan, Cora 227
Kefalas, Maria 17, 184
Kuhn, Annette 22
lack 38, 55, 215, 216
Lamont, Mich`ele 7, 17, 28, 61n. 17, 63,
70, 155, 161, 167, 182, 183, 209
Lane, Robert E. 118
Lareau, Annette 17, 128, 129
Lawler, Stephanie 17
Lichtenberg, Judith 120
life-chances 1, 73, 86
Longhurst, Brian 17, 171
Lucey, Helen 16, 128, 129, 207
luck 66; see also moral luck
McCall, Leslie 83
MacIntyre, Alasdair 17, 111, 112, 113
Macleod, Jay 17, 161, 195
McNay, Lois 28, 29n. 9
McRobbie, Angela 120
managers 155, 209
Manent, Paul 6n.2
markets 14, 656, 78, 8990, 91, 229
Marx, Karl 107
Marxist theory 52
masculinity 834, 126, 131, 211
means-testing 162
merit 66, 202, 205
meritocracy 121, 160, 181, 226
methodology 21318
Midgley, Mary 32n. 12, 46, 193n. 10
Mill, John Stuart 49, 197
Miller, David 200n. 16
money 115
246
Index
objectivity 36
Offe, Claus 78
ONeill, John 53n. 1, 68, 126
othering 20, 43, 49, 54, 559, 163
Index
and competition 154
low-level 153, 1568
and social order 1589
vicarious 154
see also self-respect
Skeggs, Beverley 15, 16, 84, 164, 174,
177, 205
Smith, Adam 17, 42, 45, 47, 111n. 13,
11314, 120, 14152, 195, 223
The Theory of Moral Sentiments 45, 141
The Wealth of Nations 118
snobbery, see class contempt
social constructionism 11, 33, 38, 76,
21920
social exclusion 225, 226
social geography 58, 121, 198
socialisation 31, 220
and shaping 324, 51
socialism 49, 138, 229
social science 51, 214
and the bad 139, 146
social stratification 15, 73, 77, 80
social tests 17980
social theory 20
sociological imperialism 33, 51, 57, 219
sociological reductionism 6, 7, 12, 17, 47,
119, 143, 213, 223
sociology 2, 4950, 140, 168, 201, 225
folk sociologies 4, 20, 188
solidarity 58, 80, 115
Southerton, Dale 182, 205
status 70, 77, 114, 134
Steedman, Carolyn 35, 150
struggles of the social field 3, 6, 19, 37, 67,
95138; see also distribution; good, the,
and the bad; recognition
subjectivism 11, 36, 110, 223; see also
values
subjectivity 21, 139, 170
suffering 1112, 18, 33, 38, 147, 215,
21724
247
talents 203
Tawney, R. H. 15, 126, 161n. 36, 171, 224
Taylor, Charles 18, 60
Thatcher, Margaret 1645
Thompson, E. P. 53, 98
Times Higher Educational Supplement 163,
164
toleration 1512
Tomkins, Sylvan 156, 164
unemployed, the 61, 93
use-value 20, 10611
contestation of 11011
values 5, 6, 34, 101
dominant 177
and objectivity 21415, 216, 218
plurality of 159, 161
and reason 6, 214
as subjective 21415
vanity 123
violence 1934, 193n. 10
virtues 139; see also morality; moral
sentiments
voluntarism 11, 34, 38
Walby, Sylvia 90
Walker, Margaret Urban 140
Walkerdine, Valerie 16, 128, 129,
129n. 29, 207
Warde, Alan 172
welfare 203
well-being 2, 9, 46, 51; see also flourishing
West Cumbria 160
Williams, Garrath 190n. 4
Willis, Paul 124, 197
Wolff, Jonathan 162
Wood, Allen 55, 58
work 118
Yar, Majid 55