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The working class is a subset of employees who are compensated with wage or salary-based contracts, whose exact membership varies from definition to definition. Members of the working class rely primarily upon earnings from wage labour. Most common definitions of "working class" in use in the United States limit its membership to workers who hold blue-collar and pink-collar jobs, or whose income is insufficiently high to place them in the middle class, or both. However, socialists define "working class" to include all workers who fall into this category; thus, this definition can include almost all of the working population of industrialized economies.
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Definitions
As with many terms describing social class, working class is defined and used in different ways. One definition used by many socialists is that the working class includes all those who have nothing to sell but their labour, a group otherwise referred to as the proletariat. In this sense, the working class includes white and blue-collar workers, manual and menial workers of all types, excluding individuals who derive their livelihood from business ownership or the labour of others.[verification needed] The term, which is primarily used to evoke images of laborers suffering "class disadvantage in spite of their individual effort", can also have racial connotations, applying diverse themes of poverty and implications about whether one is deserving of aid.
In other contexts the term working class refers to a section of society dependent on physical labour, especially when compensated with an hourly wage (for certain types of science, as well as journalistic or political analysis). Working-class occupations can be categorized into four groups: unskilled labourers, artisans, outworkers, and factory workers.[page needed]
Common alternative definitions of working class include definition by income level, whereby the working class is contrasted with a middle class on the basis of access to economic resources, education, cultural interests, and other goods and services, and the "white working class" has been "loosely defined" by the New York Times as comprising white people without college degrees.
Researchers in Australia have suggested that working class status should be defined subjectively as a self-identification with the working class group. This subjective approach allows individuals, rather than researchers, to define their own "subjective" and "perceived" social class.
Marxist definition: the proletariat
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Karl Marx defined the working class or proletariat as those individuals who sell their labour power for wages and who do not own the means of production. He argued that they were responsible for creating the wealth of a society, asserting that the working class physically build bridges, craft furniture, grow food, and nurse children, but do not own land or factories.
A sub-section of the proletariat, the lumpenproletariat (rag-proletariat), are the extremely poor and unemployed, such as day labourers and homeless people. Marx considered them to be devoid of class consciousness.
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In Marxist terms wage labourers and those dependent on the welfare state are working class, and those who live on accumulated capital are not, and this broad dichotomy defines the class struggle. In The Communist Manifesto, Marx and Friedrich Engels argue that it is the destiny of the working class to displace the capitalist system, with the dictatorship of the proletariat (as opposed to the "dictatorship of the bourgeoisie") abolishing the social relationships underpinning the class system before then developing into a communist society in which "the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all."
History and growth
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In feudal Europe, the working class as such did not exist in large numbers. Instead, most people were part of the labouring class, a group made up of different professions, trades and occupations. A lawyer, craftsman and peasant were all considered to be part of the same social unit, a third estate of people who were neither aristocrats nor church officials. Similar hierarchies existed outside Europe in other pre-industrial societies. The social position of these labouring classes was viewed as ordained by natural law and common religious belief.[citation needed] This social position was contested, particularly by peasants, for example during the German Peasants' War.
In the late 18th century, under the influence of the Enlightenment, European society was in a state of change, and this change could not be reconciled with the idea of a changeless God-created social order. Wealthy members of these societies created ideologies which blamed many of the problems of working-class people on their morals and ethics (i.e. excessive consumption of alcohol, perceived laziness and inability to save money). In The Making of the English Working Class, E. P. Thompson argues that the English working class was present at its own creation, and seeks to describe the transformation of pre-modern labouring classes into a modern, politically self-conscious, working class.[verification needed]
Starting around 1917, a number of countries became ruled ostensibly in the interests of the working class (see Soviet working class). Some historians have noted that a key change in these Soviet-style societies has been a new type of proletarianization, often effected by the administratively achieved forced displacement of peasants and rural workers. Since then, four major industrial states have turned towards semi-market-based governance (China, Laos, Vietnam, Cuba), and one state has turned inwards into an increasing cycle of poverty and brutalization (North Korea). Other states of this sort have collapsed (such as the Soviet Union).
Since 1960, large-scale proletarianization and enclosure of commons has occurred in the third world, generating new working classes. Additionally, countries such as India have been slowly undergoing social change, expanding the size of the urban working class.[page needed]
Informal working class
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The informal working class is a sociological term coined by Mike Davis for a class of over a billion predominantly young urban people who are in no way formally connected to the global economy and who try to survive primarily in slums. According to Davis, this class no longer corresponds to the socio-theoretical concepts of a class, from Marx, Max Weber or the theory of modernization. Thereafter, this class developed worldwide from the 1960s, especially in the southern hemisphere. In contrast to previous notions of a class of the lumpen proletariat or the notions of a "slum of hope" from the 1920s and 1930s, members of this class are given hardly any chances of attaining membership of the formal economic structures.
Higher education
Diane Reay stresses the challenges that working-class students can face during the transition to and within higher education, and research intensive universities in particular. One factor can be the university community being perceived as a predominately middle-class social space, creating a sense of otherness due to class differences in social norms and knowledge of navigating academia.
Laborer
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See also
- Apprentice
- Blue collar
- Bourgeoisie/Professional managerial class
- Critique of work
- Embourgeoisement thesis
- False consciousness
- Globalization
- Industrial novel
- Labour movement
- Living wage
- Marxian class theory
- Minimum wage
- Proletarian literature
- Proletarian novel
- Reserve army of labour
- Seebohm Rowntree, English sociological researcher
- Social mobility
- Trade union
- Vocational education
- Wage slavery
- Working-class culture
- Working class education
Working classes in different countries
- Working class in Italy
- Working class in Luxembourg
- Working class in the UK
- Working class in the United States
References
- "Working Class". Cambridge Dictionary. Archived from the original on 25 April 2019. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
- "working class". Oxford Dictionaries. Archived from the original on 16 July 2013. Retrieved 8 May 2014.
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- Thier, Hadas (13 September 2020). "The Working Class Is the Vast Majority of Society". Jacobin.
- "The Working Class". Socialist Party. 25 August 2010.
- Smith, Martin (4 January 2007). "The shape of the working class". International Socialism. 113.
- McCabe, Eddie (5 May 2018). "Karl Marx's Theory of Class Struggle: The Working Class & Revolution". Socialist Alternative.
- McKibbin 2000, p. 164.
- Feingold, Jonathan (20 October 2020). ""All (Poor) Lives Matter": How Class-Not-Race Logic Reinscribes Race and Class Privilege". University of Chicago Law Review Online: 47. Archived from the original on 3 December 2020. Retrieved 5 December 2020.
- Doob 2013.
- Linkon 1999, p. 4.
- Edsall, Thomas B. (17 June 2012). "Canaries in the Coal Mine". Campaign Stops. The New York Times. Archived from the original on 20 June 2022. Retrieved 18 June 2012.
- Rubin et al. 2014, p. 199.
- Lebowitz 2016, pp. 14–15.
- Abendroth 1973, pp. 11–12.
- Abendroth 1973.
- "Thompson: The Making of the English Working Class — Faculty of History". www.hist.cam.ac.uk. Cambridge University. Archived from the original on 13 March 2020. Retrieved 1 May 2019.
- Kuromiya 1990, p. 87.
- Gutkind 1988.
- Davis, Mike (2007). Planet der Slums [Planet of the slums] (in German). Berlin: Assoziation A. p. 183.
- Davis, Mike (27 August 2007). "Planet der Slums – Urbanisierung ohne Urbanität" [Planet of the Slums - Urbanization without urbanity]. (in German). Archived from the original on 9 October 2015.
- Reay, Diane (2021). "The working classes and higher education: Meritocratic fallacies of upward mobility in the United Kingdom". European Journal of Education. 56 (1): 53–64. doi:10.1111/ejed.12438. ISSN 1465-3435. S2CID 234081023.
- "Occupational Outlook Handbook, Construction Laborers and Helpers". U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics. 31 May 2008. Archived from the original on 1 March 2024.
Bibliography
- Abendroth, Wolfgang (1973). A Short History of the European Working Class.
- Doob, Christopher B. (2013). Social Inequality and Social Stratification in US Society. Upper Saddle River, New Jersey: Pearson Education. ISBN 978-0-205-79241-2.
- Gutkind, Peter C. W., ed. (1988). Third Worlds Workers: Comparative International Labour Studies. International Studies in Sociology and Social Anthropology. Vol. 49. Leiden, Netherlands: E.J. Brill. ISBN 978-90-04-08788-0. ISSN 0074-8684.
- Kuromiya, Hiroaki (1990). Stalin's Industrial Revolution: Politics and Workers, 1928–1931.
- Lebowitz, Michael A. (2016). Beyond Capital: Marx's Political Economy of the Working Class. Palgrave Macmillan.
- Linkon, Sherry Lee (1999). "Introduction". In Linkon, Sherry Lee (ed.). Teaching Working Class. Amherst, Massachusetts: University of Massachusetts Press. pp. 1ff. ISBN 978-1-55849-188-5.
- McKibbin, Ross (2000). Classes and Cultures: England, 1918–1951.
- Rubin, Mark; Denson, Nida; Kilpatrick, Sue; Matthews, Kelly E.; Stehlik, Tom; Zyngier, David (2014). "'I Am Working-Class': Subjective Self-Definition as a Missing Measure of Social Class and Socioeconomic Status in Higher Education Research". Educational Researcher. 43 (4): 196–200. doi:10.3102/0013189X14528373. hdl:1959.13/1043609. ISSN 1935-102X. S2CID 145576929.
Further reading
- Benson, John (2003). The Working Class in Britain, 1850–1939. London: I.B. Tauris. ISBN 978-1-86064-902-8.
- Blackledge, Paul (2011). "Why Workers Can Change the World". Socialist Review. No. 364. London. Archived from the original on 10 December 2011. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
- Connell, Raewyn; Irving, Terry (1980). Class Structure in Australian History. Melbourne: Longman Cheshire.
- Engels, Friedrich (1968). The Condition of the Working Class in England. Translated by Henderson, W. O.; Chaloner, W. H. Stanford, California: Stanford University Press. ISBN 978-0-8047-0634-6.
- Jakopovich, Daniel (2014), The Concept of Class (PDF), Cambridge Studies in Social Research, No. 14., Cambridge University Press, archived (PDF) from the original on 24 September 2021, retrieved 30 July 2021
- Leon, Carol Boyd. "The life of American workers in 1915," Monthly Labor Review (U.S. Bureau of Labor Statistics, February 2016) https://doi.org/10.21916/mlr.2016.5
- Miles, Andrew; Savage, Mike (1994). The Remaking of the British Working Class, 1840–1940. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-1-134-90681-9.
- Moran, William (2002). Belles of New England: The Women of the Textile Mills and the Families Whose Wealth They Wove. New York: Thomas Dunne Books. ISBN 978-0-312-30183-5.
- Raine, April Janise (2011). "Lifestyles of the Not So Rich and Famous: Ideological Shifts in Popular Culture, Reagan-Era Sitcoms and Portrayals of the Working Class". McNair Scholars Research Journal. 7 (1): 63–78. Archived from the original on 20 November 2018. Retrieved 20 November 2018.
- Rose, Jonathan (2010). The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes (2nd ed.). New Haven, Connecticut: Yale University Press. ISBN 978-0-300-15365-1.
- Rubin, Lillian B. (1976). Worlds of Pain: Life in the Working Class Family. New York: Basic Books. ISBN 978-0-465-09724-1.
- Rowntree, Seebohm (2000) [1901]. Poverty: A Study of Town Life. Macmillan and Co. ISBN 1-86134-202-0.
- Sheehan, Steven T. (2010). "'Pow! Right in the Kisser': Ralph Kramden, Jackie Gleason, and the Emergence of the Frustrated Working-Class Man". Journal of Popular Culture. 43 (3): 564–582. doi:10.1111/j.1540-5931.2010.00758.x. ISSN 1540-5931.
- Shipler, David K. (2004). The Working Poor: Invisible in America. New York: Knopf. ISBN 978-0-375-40890-8.
- Skeggs, Beverley (2004). Class, Self, Culture. London: Routledge. ISBN 978-0-415-30086-5.
- Thompson, E. P. (1968). The Making of the English Working Class (rev. ed.). Harmondsworth, England: Penguin Books.
- Turner, Katherine Leonard (2014). How the Other Half Ate: A History of Working-Class Meals at the Turn of the Century. Berkeley, California: University of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-27758-8.
- Zweig, Michael (2001). Working Class Majority: America's Best Kept Secret. Ithaca, New York: Cornell University Press. ISBN 978-0-8014-8727-9.
External links
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- The Center for Working-Class Studies at Youngstown State University
The working class is a subset of employees who are compensated with wage or salary based contracts whose exact membership varies from definition to definition Members of the working class rely primarily upon earnings from wage labour Most common definitions of working class in use in the United States limit its membership to workers who hold blue collar and pink collar jobs or whose income is insufficiently high to place them in the middle class or both However socialists define working class to include all workers who fall into this category thus this definition can include almost all of the working population of industrialized economies Construction workers commonly regarded as working class at work at St Paul s Hospital Cardiac center in Ethiopia 2017DefinitionsAs with many terms describing social class working class is defined and used in different ways One definition used by many socialists is that the working class includes all those who have nothing to sell but their labour a group otherwise referred to as the proletariat In this sense the working class includes white and blue collar workers manual and menial workers of all types excluding individuals who derive their livelihood from business ownership or the labour of others verification needed The term which is primarily used to evoke images of laborers suffering class disadvantage in spite of their individual effort can also have racial connotations applying diverse themes of poverty and implications about whether one is deserving of aid In other contexts the term working class refers to a section of society dependent on physical labour especially when compensated with an hourly wage for certain types of science as well as journalistic or political analysis Working class occupations can be categorized into four groups unskilled labourers artisans outworkers and factory workers page needed Common alternative definitions of working class include definition by income level whereby the working class is contrasted with a middle class on the basis of access to economic resources education cultural interests and other goods and services and the white working class has been loosely defined by the New York Times as comprising white people without college degrees Researchers in Australia have suggested that working class status should be defined subjectively as a self identification with the working class group This subjective approach allows individuals rather than researchers to define their own subjective and perceived social class Marxist definition the proletariat Striking teamsters battling police on the streets of Minneapolis Minnesota June 1934 Karl Marx defined the working class or proletariat as those individuals who sell their labour power for wages and who do not own the means of production He argued that they were responsible for creating the wealth of a society asserting that the working class physically build bridges craft furniture grow food and nurse children but do not own land or factories A sub section of the proletariat the lumpenproletariat rag proletariat are the extremely poor and unemployed such as day labourers and homeless people Marx considered them to be devoid of class consciousness Communist conception of class society in 1900 1901 The drawing was based on a leaflet of the Union of Russian Socialists In Marxist terms wage labourers and those dependent on the welfare state are working class and those who live on accumulated capital are not and this broad dichotomy defines the class struggle In The Communist Manifesto Marx and Friedrich Engels argue that it is the destiny of the working class to displace the capitalist system with the dictatorship of the proletariat as opposed to the dictatorship of the bourgeoisie abolishing the social relationships underpinning the class system before then developing into a communist society in which the free development of each is the condition for the free development of all History and growthWorking class life in Edwardian St Ives in Cornwall England 1906 In feudal Europe the working class as such did not exist in large numbers Instead most people were part of the labouring class a group made up of different professions trades and occupations A lawyer craftsman and peasant were all considered to be part of the same social unit a third estate of people who were neither aristocrats nor church officials Similar hierarchies existed outside Europe in other pre industrial societies The social position of these labouring classes was viewed as ordained by natural law and common religious belief citation needed This social position was contested particularly by peasants for example during the German Peasants War In the late 18th century under the influence of the Enlightenment European society was in a state of change and this change could not be reconciled with the idea of a changeless God created social order Wealthy members of these societies created ideologies which blamed many of the problems of working class people on their morals and ethics i e excessive consumption of alcohol perceived laziness and inability to save money In The Making of the English Working Class E P Thompson argues that the English working class was present at its own creation and seeks to describe the transformation of pre modern labouring classes into a modern politically self conscious working class verification needed Starting around 1917 a number of countries became ruled ostensibly in the interests of the working class see Soviet working class Some historians have noted that a key change in these Soviet style societies has been a new type of proletarianization often effected by the administratively achieved forced displacement of peasants and rural workers Since then four major industrial states have turned towards semi market based governance China Laos Vietnam Cuba and one state has turned inwards into an increasing cycle of poverty and brutalization North Korea Other states of this sort have collapsed such as the Soviet Union Since 1960 large scale proletarianization and enclosure of commons has occurred in the third world generating new working classes Additionally countries such as India have been slowly undergoing social change expanding the size of the urban working class page needed Informal working classRagpicker in Delhi India The informal working class is a sociological term coined by Mike Davis for a class of over a billion predominantly young urban people who are in no way formally connected to the global economy and who try to survive primarily in slums According to Davis this class no longer corresponds to the socio theoretical concepts of a class from Marx Max Weber or the theory of modernization Thereafter this class developed worldwide from the 1960s especially in the southern hemisphere In contrast to previous notions of a class of the lumpen proletariat or the notions of a slum of hope from the 1920s and 1930s members of this class are given hardly any chances of attaining membership of the formal economic structures Higher educationDiane Reay stresses the challenges that working class students can face during the transition to and within higher education and research intensive universities in particular One factor can be the university community being perceived as a predominately middle class social space creating a sense of otherness due to class differences in social norms and knowledge of navigating academia LaborerThis section is an excerpt from Laborer edit Laborers at work A laborer or labourer is a person who works in manual labor typed within the construction industry There is a generic factory laborer which is defined separately as a factory worker Laborers are in a working class of wage earners in which their only possession of significant material value is their labor Industries employing laborers include building things such as roads road paving buildings bridges tunnels pipelines civil and industrial and railway tracks Laborers work with blasting tools hand tools power tools air tools and small heavy equipment and act as assistants to tradesmen as well such as operators or cement masons The 1st century BC engineer Vitruvius writes that a good crew of laborers is just as valuable as any other aspect of construction Other than the addition of pneumatics laborer practices have changed little With the introduction of field technologies the laborers have been quick to adapt to the use of this technology as being laborers workforce See alsoSociety portalApprentice Blue collar Bourgeoisie Professional managerial class Critique of work Embourgeoisement thesis False consciousness Globalization Industrial novel Labour movement Living wage Marxian class theory Minimum wage Proletarian literature Proletarian novel Reserve army of labour Seebohm Rowntree English sociological researcher Social mobility Trade union Vocational education Wage slavery Working class culture Working class education Working classes in different countries Working class in Italy Working class in Luxembourg Working class in the UK Working class in the United StatesReferences Working Class Cambridge Dictionary Archived from the original on 25 April 2019 Retrieved 1 May 2019 working class Oxford Dictionaries Archived from the original on 16 July 2013 Retrieved 8 May 2014 Thier Hadas 13 September 2020 The Working Class Is the Vast Majority of Society Jacobin The Working Class Socialist Party 25 August 2010 Smith Martin 4 January 2007 The shape of the working class International Socialism 113 McCabe Eddie 5 May 2018 Karl Marx s Theory of Class Struggle The Working Class amp Revolution Socialist Alternative McKibbin 2000 p 164 Feingold Jonathan 20 October 2020 All Poor Lives Matter How Class Not Race Logic Reinscribes Race and Class Privilege University of Chicago Law Review Online 47 Archived from the original on 3 December 2020 Retrieved 5 December 2020 Doob 2013 Linkon 1999 p 4 Edsall Thomas B 17 June 2012 Canaries in the Coal Mine Campaign Stops The New York Times Archived from the original on 20 June 2022 Retrieved 18 June 2012 Rubin et al 2014 p 199 Lebowitz 2016 pp 14 15 Abendroth 1973 pp 11 12 Abendroth 1973 Thompson The Making of the English Working Class Faculty of History www hist cam ac uk Cambridge University Archived from the original on 13 March 2020 Retrieved 1 May 2019 Kuromiya 1990 p 87 Gutkind 1988 Davis Mike 2007 Planet der Slums Planet of the slums in German Berlin Assoziation A p 183 Davis Mike 27 August 2007 Planet der Slums Urbanisierung ohne Urbanitat Planet of the Slums Urbanization without urbanity de in German Archived from the original on 9 October 2015 Reay Diane 2021 The working classes and higher education Meritocratic fallacies of upward mobility in the United Kingdom European Journal of Education 56 1 53 64 doi 10 1111 ejed 12438 ISSN 1465 3435 S2CID 234081023 Occupational Outlook Handbook Construction Laborers and Helpers U S Bureau of Labor Statistics 31 May 2008 Archived from the original on 1 March 2024 Bibliography Abendroth Wolfgang 1973 A Short History of the European Working Class Doob Christopher B 2013 Social Inequality and Social Stratification in US Society Upper Saddle River New Jersey Pearson Education ISBN 978 0 205 79241 2 Gutkind Peter C W ed 1988 Third Worlds Workers Comparative International Labour Studies International Studies in Sociology and Social Anthropology Vol 49 Leiden Netherlands E J Brill ISBN 978 90 04 08788 0 ISSN 0074 8684 Kuromiya Hiroaki 1990 Stalin s Industrial Revolution Politics and Workers 1928 1931 Lebowitz Michael A 2016 Beyond Capital Marx s Political Economy of the Working Class Palgrave Macmillan Linkon Sherry Lee 1999 Introduction In Linkon Sherry Lee ed Teaching Working Class Amherst Massachusetts University of Massachusetts Press pp 1ff ISBN 978 1 55849 188 5 McKibbin Ross 2000 Classes and Cultures England 1918 1951 Rubin Mark Denson Nida Kilpatrick Sue Matthews Kelly E Stehlik Tom Zyngier David 2014 I Am Working Class Subjective Self Definition as a Missing Measure of Social Class and Socioeconomic Status in Higher Education Research Educational Researcher 43 4 196 200 doi 10 3102 0013189X14528373 hdl 1959 13 1043609 ISSN 1935 102X S2CID 145576929 Further readingBenson John 2003 The Working Class in Britain 1850 1939 London I B Tauris ISBN 978 1 86064 902 8 Blackledge Paul 2011 Why Workers Can Change the World Socialist Review No 364 London Archived from the original on 10 December 2011 Retrieved 20 November 2018 Connell Raewyn Irving Terry 1980 Class Structure in Australian History Melbourne Longman Cheshire Engels Friedrich 1968 The Condition of the Working Class in England Translated by Henderson W O Chaloner W H Stanford California Stanford University Press ISBN 978 0 8047 0634 6 Jakopovich Daniel 2014 The Concept of Class PDF Cambridge Studies in Social Research No 14 Cambridge University Press archived PDF from the original on 24 September 2021 retrieved 30 July 2021 Leon Carol Boyd The life of American workers in 1915 Monthly Labor Review U S Bureau of Labor Statistics February 2016 https doi org 10 21916 mlr 2016 5Miles Andrew Savage Mike 1994 The Remaking of the British Working Class 1840 1940 London Routledge ISBN 978 1 134 90681 9 Moran William 2002 Belles of New England The Women of the Textile Mills and the Families Whose Wealth They Wove New York Thomas Dunne Books ISBN 978 0 312 30183 5 Raine April Janise 2011 Lifestyles of the Not So Rich and Famous Ideological Shifts in Popular Culture Reagan Era Sitcoms and Portrayals of the Working Class McNair Scholars Research Journal 7 1 63 78 Archived from the original on 20 November 2018 Retrieved 20 November 2018 Rose Jonathan 2010 The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes 2nd ed New Haven Connecticut Yale University Press ISBN 978 0 300 15365 1 Rubin Lillian B 1976 Worlds of Pain Life in the Working Class Family New York Basic Books ISBN 978 0 465 09724 1 Rowntree Seebohm 2000 1901 Poverty A Study of Town Life Macmillan and Co ISBN 1 86134 202 0 Sheehan Steven T 2010 Pow Right in the Kisser Ralph Kramden Jackie Gleason and the Emergence of the Frustrated Working Class Man Journal of Popular Culture 43 3 564 582 doi 10 1111 j 1540 5931 2010 00758 x ISSN 1540 5931 Shipler David K 2004 The Working Poor Invisible in America New York Knopf ISBN 978 0 375 40890 8 Skeggs Beverley 2004 Class Self Culture London Routledge ISBN 978 0 415 30086 5 Thompson E P 1968 The Making of the English Working Class rev ed Harmondsworth England Penguin Books Turner Katherine Leonard 2014 How the Other Half Ate A History of Working Class Meals at the Turn of the Century Berkeley California University of California Press ISBN 978 0 520 27758 8 Zweig Michael 2001 Working Class Majority America s Best Kept Secret Ithaca New York Cornell University Press ISBN 978 0 8014 8727 9 External linksLook up working class in Wiktionary the free dictionary Wikiquote has quotations related to Working class The Center for Working Class Studies at Youngstown State University