|
|
|
« MRP Home |
![]() |
|
|
ISBN: |
MORE UNEQUALAspects of Class in the United States Essays by John Bellamy Foster, William K. Tabb, David Roediger, Stephanie Luce, Mark Brenner, and others. “Workers in the United States are systematically being allocated a shrinking share of the prodigious wealth we produce, and that’s old news. This widening exploitation of workers and communities further exposes the myth of a ‘just’ capitalist economy. Despite the radical increase in economic and social inequality, we still lack a cohesive popular understanding and consciousness of why and how our market-based economic system facilitates this ‘one-sided class war’ against us. “The shocking data about wealth, income, home ownership, access to health care, education, and political influence cry out for analysis which is driven by the desire not only to understand but also to transform. Fortunately, the scholars and activists who have contributed to More Unequal offer such analysis, and they do so clearly and succinctly. This book will prove useful to teachers, students, researchers, and activists as we struggle to understand how class is working in the twenty-first century United States.” —Peter Rachleff, professor of history, Macalester College, and President, Working Class Studies Association “This excellent collection helps us to further rehabilitate the discussion of class both in the United States and globally.” —Bill Fletcher, Jr., writer and activist “Extraordinarily comprehensive…focuses on the effects of class oppression and exploitation” —Roxanne Dunbar-Ortiz, writer With contributions by John Bellamy Foster, Vincent Navarro, William K. Tabb, Michael Perelman, Richard D. Vogel, David Roediger, Kristen Lavelle and Joe Feagin, Sabiyha Prince, Martha Gimenez, Stephanie Luce and Mark Brenner, Peter McLaren and Ramin Farahmandpur, Michael D. Yates, Angela Jancius, and Michael Zweig. Table of Contents Introduction & Acknowledgements 1. Aspects of Class in the United States: A Prologue 2. The Worldwide Class Struggle 3. The Power of the Rich 4. Some Economics of Class 5. Harder Times: Undocumented Workers and the U.S. Informal Economy 6. The Retreat from Race and Class 7. Hard Truth in the Big Easy: Race and Class in New Orleans, Pre- and Post-Katrina 8. Will the Real Black Middle Class Please Stand Up? 9. Back to Class: Reflections on the Dialectics of Class and Identity 10. Women and Class: What Has Happened in Forty Years? 11. The Pedagogy of Oppression 12. Class: A Personal Story 13. Class for a Downwardly Mobile Generation 14. Six Points on Class Contributors Notes Index Michael D. Yates is associate editor of Monthly Review. For many years he taught economics at the University of Pittsburgh at Johnstown. He is the author of Cheap Motels and a Hotplate: An Economist’s Travelogue (2006), Naming the System: Inequality and Work in the Global Economy (2004), and Why Unions Matter (1998), all published by Monthly Review Press. MONTHLY REVIEW PRESS |
|