ABSTRACT

Originally published in 1982, Rethinking Social Inequality is a collection of essays looking at the breadth of contemporary work in social inequality. The book focuses on inequality as a central project of sociological enquiry, and is unified by the overarching rejection of a distributional notion of inequality, in the place of a relational one. The object of the study is not the deprived social group, but the unequal social relations, which is manifested in a variety of forms. The themes addressed in this collection indicate a shift in the areas of study concerned with social inequality, rejecting class-based inequality in with that of race, gender and age.

chapter 1|14 pages

Introduction: Rethinking Inequality

chapter 2|28 pages

White Sociology, Black Struggle

Val Amos, Paul Gilroy and Errol Lawrence

chapter 4|32 pages

The Generation Game: Playing by the Rules

John Fitz and John Hood-Williams

chapter 5|30 pages

Aging and Inequality: Consumer Culture and the New Middle Age

Mike Featherstone and Mike Hepworth

chapter 6|22 pages

Egalitarianism and Social Inequality in Scotland

David Mccrone, Frank Bechhofer and Stephen Kendrick

chapter 7|36 pages

Inequality of Access to Political Television: The Case of the General Election of 1979

Alan Clarke, Ian Taylor and Justin Wren-Lewis

chapter 8|27 pages

Classes, Class Fractions and Monetarism

Kevin Bonnett

chapter 9|29 pages

Moral Economy and the Welfare State

Roger a. Cloward and Frances Fox Piven