ABSTRACT

"Social Status in the City presents a scientific method for measuring social status in urban settings - the Index of Urban Status (IUS). The authors show how the index and the concepts of status on which it is based were derived by describing the procedures used in studying the social structure of a particular Midwestern city. Richard P. Coleman modified the IUS when he was employed in commerce research studies of social class phenomena in American cities.A social class is a group of people who are judged by members of the community as equal to one another in social prestige. They are believed to be either superior or inferior in prestige and acceptability to other groups who constitute the social classes that are below or above them. By this definition, Yankee City, Deep South, Jonesville, Kansas City - and presumably every community in the U.S. - can all be described as having social class systems. This book is a case study aimed at larger theoretical importance.The study should be considered in the context of sociology's concerns with problems of urban stratification, the characteristics of various social class groups, and the ways these groups change over time. In this context, the book makes a contribution to social science methods as well as observation. The authors have followed in the tradition of W. Lloyd Warner and others who have attempted to understand the status structures of whole communities. This classic volume has brilliantly stood the test of time."

part One|113 pages

Studying an Urban Status Structure

chapter 1|8 pages

Overview of Research Procedures

chapter 2|19 pages

Class Consciousness in the City

chapter 3|24 pages

The Dimensions of Status

chapter 4|26 pages

Delineating the Status Structure

chapter 5|34 pages

The Index of Urban Status

part Two|135 pages

Social Classes

chapter 6|26 pages

People at the Jop

chapter 7|15 pages

Upper-Middle Class

chapter 8|17 pages

Lower-Middle Class

chapter 9|24 pages

Working Class

chapter 10|21 pages

People at the Bottom

chapter 11|30 pages

Social Mobility in Kansas City

part Three|38 pages

Nationwide Status Structure

chapter 13|17 pages

A Changing Class Structure?