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Social Class: WTF? Introduction to Bourdieu and Marx on class - YouTube
Channel: Tom Nicholas
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Hello, my name's Tom and welcome back to my channel where I talk a little bit about
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theatre, a little bit about being a
PhD student, and a little bit about those
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two things kind of crushed together in a
vice. Today, I wanted to add to my series
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What the Theory? in which I do
some introductory videos on some
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critical concepts within the humanities. And today, we are going to look
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at class.
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Broadly speaking class, or social class,
is a way of breaking down society
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hierarchically so we can compare how
much power an individual or group of
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people has in comparison to another
group or individual within the same
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society. Colloquially and in political
discourse we often hear terms like
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middle class or working-class thrown
around. But what I wanted to do today was
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foreground two particular theories which
provide a theoretical underpinning for
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that notion. Now, it's worth saying that class has
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taken many different forms across time
and across geography so today I'm
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primarily speaking about class as it
relates to contemporary capitalist
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societies. Feudal systems, caste systems
and those involving slavery all have a
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deep intersection with class but they sit slightly outside my field
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of knowledge so I will leave it to
someone else to create a wonderful
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YouTube video about those. A useful place
to start with class in contemporary
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society then, is with Karl Marx. Marx saw
class not just as a theoretical concept
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or social construct but as the defining
tension of the capitalist system. History,
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as he had it, was the long struggle
between the proletariat and the
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bourgeoisie. The distinction between
where one sits within Marx's framing is
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in what one's relationship is to the
means of production. The proletariat, then,
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are the working classes, those who earn a
living by performing a task--whatever
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type of task that might be--in return for
a wage. The bourgeoisie are those who,
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under a capitalist system, own the means
of production which might be a factory,
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it might be a patent for a particular
technology, or it might be land. Their
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money is made through speculation, profit, rent and interest. For example, a member
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of the bourgeoisie might own all or part
of a company through which they employ a
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number of proletarians or workers to
create, design and then market and
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deliver an object. The company then sells
that object for more than the cost of
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the materials used to make it and the
cost of paying the workers to do all
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that previously mentioned work to
provide a nice tidy profit for our
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capitalists. So, while the worker must
spend quite a lot of what they earn on
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food and housing and the necessities, our
capitalist has quite a lot of money left
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over after fulfilling those desires. As
such, they are able to go away and invest
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in further projects therefore increasing
the amount of profit they will make in
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the future. Thus the bourgeoisie have a significant
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power advantage over the working class.
When profits start to fall at a particular
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company, we quite often see that it's
those jobs at the very bottom of the
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ladder that start to go first. Our
capitalist, with their abundance of
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capital, might just decide to diversify
their interests slightly. Familial
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inheritance is really important here too,
with the bourgeoisie leaving quite a lot
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of their wealth to the next generation
and therefore giving their next of kin a
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head start which is not available to
those further down the class system. In
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Capital in the 21st Century,
Thomas Piketty gives a really insightful
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(if slightly dense) rundown of how capital
has accumulated into fewer and fewer
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hands over the last 200 years or so. The
crux of Marx's argument, then, is that the
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bourgeoisie continue to grow their
wealth through interest, profit, rent and
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inheritance so their power within
society grows and they are able to
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influence political policies and parties.
To Marx, then, class, social power and
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social standing are very much rooted in
the amount of financial capital an
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individual or a group has. Notably, this
is a very binary system and although Marx
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does mention the existence of the so
called petty bourgeoisie, or middle class,
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he doesn't flash this idea out fully
beyond suggesting that they might be
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small business owners or those very
highly paid professionals. To find a
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more granular system of analyzing class,
then, we might turn to the French
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sociologist Pierre Bourdieu. Bourdieu suggests that social class
is made up of three contributing factors:
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economic capital, social capital and
cultural capital. This is a slightly more
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complex system but allows us for a
slightly more specific analysis than the
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orthodox Marxist approach. Economic
capital works much the same as it does
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in Marx's system, recognizing how much
economic power an individual or group
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has within society. Social capital, then, acknowledges
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the social and familial relationships that
an individual or group might have that
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might give them a certain advantage in
life. For example, having a friend of the
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family work at a particular firm who can
introduce you or perhaps get you a job
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might count as being an aspect of social
capital. Cultural capital is perhaps the
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most complex notion within Bourdieu's
theory and refers to how the aesthetic
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tastes that we are taught by the
society around us as we are young
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subconsciously guide us towards a certain position in life. Certain activities are
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related to certain social classes, for
example, in the UK going to live football
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might be deemed to be a working class
activity whereas going to the Opera
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might seem like quite a bourgeois
activity. There's a similar distinction
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between hip-hop and classical music but
we can also extend this notion beyond to
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potentially the clothes that people wear,
the way they talk, their accent, or the
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food that they choose to eat. All of
these things count as class markers on a
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person. For example when someone might describe something as being a little bit
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middle class or a little bit common.
Bourdieu's argument is that by learning
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these behaviors and learning to
preference these particular activities
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we learn what class we're meant to be in
and therefore we decide which social
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groups to exist within and therefore
what jobs who might be available to us
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in the future.
Broadly speaking, then, when Marx
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emphasizes economic capital and suggests
that that grows to have an influence on
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culture, Bourdieu suggests that our
individual cultural capital has an
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impact on how much economic capital we
might earn. Bourdieu is less interested
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in our relationship to the means of
production than with class as a social
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phenomenon. Both Marx and Bourdieu,
however, are very clear that
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socio-cultural capital and economic
capital have an impact on one another.
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And, if you'd like to unpack that notion
a little bit more, I did a video on the
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concept of hegemony a little while
ago which you can go and find. However
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much it's argued that class is
potentially a thing of the past, I think,
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by using some of the methods that I've
brought through in this video, we can see
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that it's actually at the very heart of contemporary society.
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Financial inequality is indeed growing
across the globe and, with it, the
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distinction between classes. Therefore in
any critical approach to the humanities,
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to culture or the social sciences,
I think class has to be in there
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somewhere and it's really key to
unlocking the empowerment or otherwise
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of an individual or group within society.
Thank you very much for watching this
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video, I hope this has given you a few tasters of some concepts of class
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and maybe some ideas of where to go off
and look for some slightly more deeper
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reading somewhere else.Thank you
very much for watching, if you've enjoyed
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this video please do give it a thumbs up
or let me know down below if there's any
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subjects you'd like me to cover in the
future as that's always super, super handy.
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Thank you very much for watching
and have a great week!
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