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Income mobility and the middle class
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ISBN: 0844770752 Year: 1996 Publisher: Washington, DC : The AEI Press,

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La grande peur des classes moyennes.
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ISBN: 2710307685 Year: 1996 Publisher: Paris Table ronde

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The middling sort : commerce, gender, and the family in England, 1680 - 1780.
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ISBN: 0520202600 Year: 1996 Publisher: Berkeley University of California press

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To be one of "the middling sort" in urban England in the late seventeenth or eighteenth century was to live a life tied, one way or another, to the world of commerce. In a lively study that combines narrative and alternately poignant and hilarious anecdotes with convincing analysis, Margaret R. Hunt offers a view of middling society during the hundred years that separated the Glorious Revolution from the factory age. Thanks to her exploration of many family papers and court records, Hunt is able to examine what people thought, felt, and valued. She finds that early capitalism and early modern family life were far more insecure than their "classical" models supposed.

Die Biographie des Bürgers : Lebensformen und Denkweisen in der formativen Phase des deutschen Bürgertums (1680 - 1815)
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ISBN: 352535441X 9783525354414 Year: 1996 Volume: 127 Publisher: Göttingen Vandenhoeck und Ruprecht

Art and the Victorian middle class : money and the making of cultural identity
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ISBN: 0521550904 Year: 1996 Publisher: New York (N.Y.) : Cambridge university press,

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Rabbit redux.
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ISBN: 0449911934 Year: 1996 Publisher: New York Fawcett

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U.S.A. 2012 : after the middle-class revolution
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ISBN: 1483345122 0585266395 Year: 1996 Publisher: Chatham, N.J. : Chatham House,

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The year is 2012. David Reynolds is a college sophomore whose Thanksgiving weekend assignment is to conduct several interviews with his parents, in order to understand how they and their generation managed to reconstruct the American political system in the sixteen short years between 1996 and 2012. He uses as his starting point the New Declaration of Independence of the Fourth of July, 2000, and explores first how it came about and then how its commitments were steadily achieved in the following years through sustained middle-class mobilization, electronic communication, a series of practical and populist constitutional changes, and a prosperity-restoring, middle class-oriented economic nationalist policy program. In his final paper (excerpted in the epilogue), David marvels at the dedication and resourcefulness of his parents and their peers, and speculates about what his world would be like if they had failed to take up the challenge to reconstruct their country and restore the future for themselves and their children. But the fictional theme is only about a quarter of the content here. The rest is data-grounded analysis of the major problems of the United States today and the Third World future they will bring about without fundamental change in our political party and representative systems. Dolbeare and Hubbell follow up this grim portrait with a provocative and credible vision of how a determined middle class could assert popular control over the big money, selfish politicians, and special interests that now dominate the American political system. The middle class is seen as systematically victimized by bipartisan public policy for the past thirty years which in turn has been enabled by its own passivity, acceptance of scapegoating diversions, and "false patriotism"--Refusal to look critically at traditional American beliefs and practices and selectively modernize them to fit changing needs and conditions. The heart of the book is the vision of a reconstructed system, and the specific measures to accomplish it. Dolbeare and Hubbell assert that almost all Americans realize that we have serious problems - disappearing jobs, deteriorating public services, and particularly a dramatic and rapidly growing gap between the rich and everybody else - and a political structure that cannot or will not address them. But nobody seems to offer solutions that are at once practical and capable of solving the problems at their origins: a combination of the structure of political power in the country and its thoughtless or hopeless acceptance by the bulk of its citizens.

La professionnalisation des classes moyennes
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ISBN: 2858922438 Year: 1996 Publisher: Talence : Maison des sciences de l'homme d'Aquitaine,

The middling sort : commerce, gender, and the family in England, 1680-1780
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ISBN: 0520916948 0585062854 9780520916944 9780585062853 9780520202603 0520202600 0520202600 Year: 1996 Publisher: Berkeley : University of California Press,

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To be one of "the middling sort" in urban England in the late seventeenth or eighteenth century was to live a life tied, one way or another, to the world of commerce. In a lively study that combines narrative and alternately poignant and hilarious anecdotes with convincing analysis, Margaret R. Hunt offers a view of middling society during the hundred years that separated the Glorious Revolution from the factory age. Thanks to her exploration of many family papers and court records, Hunt is able to examine what people thought, felt, and valued. She finds that early capitalism and early modern family life were far more insecure than their "classical" models supposed. Commercial needs and social needs coincided to a large extent. The family is central to Hunt's story, and she shows how financial struggles brought conflict, ambiguity, and tension to the home. She investigates the way gender intertwined with class and family hierarchy and the way many businesses survived as precarious successes, secured through the sacrifices made by female as well as male family members. The Middling Sort offers a dynamic portrait of a society struggling to minimize the considerable social and psychic dislocation that accompanied England's launch of a full-scale market economy.

The new middle class and the remaking of the central city
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ISBN: 0198232926 9780198232926 Year: 1996 Publisher: Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press,

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