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Working class culture is a range of cultures created by or popular among working class people. The cultures can be contrasted with high culture and folk culture, and are sometimes equated with popular culture and low culture (the counterpart of high culture).

Working class culture is extremely geographically diverse, leading some to question whether the cultures have anything in common. Many socialists with a class struggle viewpoint see its importance as arising from the proletariat they champion. Some states that claim to be communist have declared an official working class culture, most notably socialist realism, which aims to glorify the worker. However, glorification of the worker in abstract is seldom a feature of independent working class cultures. Other socialists such as Lenin believed that there could be no authentic proletarian culture free from capitalism, and that high culture should not be outside the experience of workers.

Working class culture developed during the Industrial Revolution. Because most of the newly created working class were former peasants, the cultures took on much of the localised folk culture. This was soon altered by the changed conditions of social relationships and the increased mobility of the workforce, and later by the marketing of mass-produced cultural artefacts such as prints and ornaments, and events such as music hall and cinema.

Portrayals in popular culture [edit]

Working class culture has been portrayed on TV shows such as "'Roseanne',' Good Times, Married...With Children, All in the Family, and Shameless in which American families struggle to pay for basic needs. In the United States, working-class culture is sometimes associated with Southern culture. Thus, shows like The Dukes of Hazzard or The Beverly Hillbillies can be seen as examples of that culture. The English TV show Shameless highlights working class life in a Manchester suburb as does its American namesake set in Chicago.

One of Australian pub rock singer Jimmy Barnes' more popular songs, "Working Class Man" references working class culture and hardships.

Along with Lad culture in the U.K., some youth subcultures such as skinheads, punks, rockers and metalheads have been associated with working class culture. In the U.S., especially, some White Americans have reclaimed the usually derogatory term redneck as an identifier with working class White Americans. Many may deliberately embrace redneck stereotypes but choose to avoid usage of the word due to its frequent association with negative attitudes such as racism. Jeff Foxworthy and Larry the Cable Guy of the Blue Collar Comedy Tour are among the most popularized examples of redneck culture being embraced ironically.

Some sports such as rugby league football, darts and association football, which is sometimes referred to as the working man's game, are associated with the working class in the U.K. In the U.S., American Football and baseball are associated with the working class.

Further reading [edit]

  • Navickas, Katrina, "What happened to class? New histories of labour and collective action in Britain," Social History, May 2011, Vol. 36 Issue 2, pp 192-204.
  • Rose, Jonathan, The Intellectual Life of the British Working Classes. New Haven and London: Yale University Press, 2001.

See also [edit]



Original courtesy of Wikipedia: http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Working_class_culture — Please support Wikipedia.
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18 news items

The Guardian

The Guardian
Thu, 09 May 2013 05:27:34 -0700

It is true that working-class culture has dwindled over the last 30 years. When Margaret Thatcher smashed the trade unions and British industry with them, she also smashed solidarity, community and hope. But those are the values that need to be ...

The Guardian

The Guardian
Sat, 04 May 2013 03:31:11 -0700

Barely more than a generation later, Britain is paying a heavy price for Mrs Thatcher's atavistic desire to wipe out any trace of working-class culture, or "society", as she called it. All over London, former council homes are changing hands for ...

Slate Magazine

Slate Magazine
Mon, 22 Apr 2013 09:34:32 -0700

An allotment, I should explain, was once a big part of British working-class culture. Dismal tracts of unused land were allotted—for a negligible rent—to working-class Brits who used them to cultivate scurvy-repelling veggies. These community gardens ...
 
Huffington Post UK
Wed, 08 May 2013 11:08:24 -0700

You said: 'These days, though, it is just not politically correct to sneer at working-class culture. So critics body swerve the masses, and attack the tabloids because they dare to offer people what they want'. People! You mean 'men' again there I ...
 
Grantland (blog)
Thu, 09 May 2013 07:39:58 -0700

Ferguson is perhaps the last of a longer tradition of Scottish footballing men with a deeply ingrained relationship to working-class culture. Or so runs the origin myth. Crucially, though, Ferguson came slightly later than the holy trilogy of great ...

The Guardian

The Guardian
Fri, 03 May 2013 09:29:21 -0700

It was perceived as a knighted, gold medal-wearing architect joining forces with a museum of middle class taste to bulldoze a bastion of working class culture. It is a perception that wasn't dispelled when the museum's director, David Dewing, was ...
 
Morning Star Online
Wed, 01 May 2013 12:39:29 -0700

A brass band proudly led a procession of trade unionists, students and pensioners through the streets of central London to the sun-drenched square, where tourists were treated to a display of Britain's real working-class culture. Union leaders, left ...

Limerick Leader

Limerick Leader
Fri, 03 May 2013 04:36:49 -0700

Donegal when faced with losing their jobs. Written in 1982, McGuinness said he wanted to write a play that celebrated the working class culture of women in the part of Donegal he grew up in. The two men which appear in the play make their mark in just ...
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