ABSTRACT

One strand of change within class analysis over the years, and one that is widely if not universally reckoned to have represented "progress", has been the increasing attention paid to the intersection of class with, or its incorporation of, other axes of social differentiation and inequality. A number of papers in this collection pay central attention to this issue (Witz, Crompton, Gregson and Lowe and Phillips and Sarre) and many of the others engage with the question in some way or other.