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Nicholas Cooper's avatar

There are new categories that have emerged that are diluting the impact of the simple class structure. The anywhere and somewhere split. The rights obsessed and self responsible groups. These transcend the class and dominate most of our personal philosophies. They often tend to coincide loosely. But not always the way people would expect. Odd alliances exist. Upper class and lower class being linked to somewhere people. Has the breakdown in the class system boundaries (which most people think is good) caused more uncertainties more anxiety and a greater fear of failure because for all those that go up some are pushed down.

Sue Ward's avatar
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My parents were upper middle class. My great grandad was knighted, my dad was MD of a multinational, I went to university, was a civil service faststreamer and I’m now a senior manager and shareholder in a consultancy serving the construction industry. So I’m solidly upper middle class you might think. Well yes and no, I’m married to a lorry driver who left school at 16 and trained as a plumber. His family are solid Derbyshire working class “somewheres” Our son is a skilled manual worker like his dad and paternal grandfather. We live in an ex-pit village. Yes we have a better standard of living then my husbands colleagues but my allegiances are solidly working class. After decades I fit into both classes. And anyone who considers my trajectory “downward mobility” will get very short shrift. I consider myself very lucky as my husband, like most people around me, are incredibly good people and our community is extraordinary. The lanyard class has belittle us and mocked our concerns at their peril for long enough.

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