Revolt from the Middle

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A01=Jonathan H. Turner
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Author_Jonathan H. Turner
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Category1=Non-Fiction
Category=HBTB
Category=JBSA
Category=JFSC
Category=JHBA
Category=NHTB
class dynamics
collective action theory
College Professors
COP=United States
Core Identity
Corporate Units
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Diffuse Anger
Diffuse Status Characteristics
Distal Bias
Diverse Institutional Domains
emotional drivers of social change
emotional energy
Emotional Polarization
Emotional Stratification
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generalized
Generalized Symbolic Media
Hominin Ancestors
Institutional Domains
Jonathan H. Turner
Language_English
Local Neighborhood Environments
media
middle class stability
Negative Emotional Arousal
Negative Emotional Energy
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Positive Emotional Arousal
Positive Emotional Energy
Postindustrial Societies
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Proximal Bias
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resource redistribution
Role Making
social inequality
softlaunch
Status Beliefs
Stratification System
symbolic
Symbolic Media

Product details

  • ISBN 9781412854740
  • Weight: 414g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Oct 2014
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Inc
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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Those who address conflict resulting from differing socio-economic groups (stratification systems) focus on the arousal of negative emotions. Less frequently explored are the effects of positive emotions, particularly among the middle classes in industrial and post-industrial societies. In more developed societies, those experiencing positive emotional energy far outnumber those who endure negative emotions.

Jonathan H. Turner sees the distribution of positive and negative emotions in developed societies as another basis for grouping people into socio-economic classifications. Such distribution explains the commitments of middle classes to the system and the lack of class-based social movements from lower classes. Turner argues for Marx's theory—when a population's vast majority is consistently experiencing negative emotions, the potential for revolution within society increases.

Turner explains why class-conflict potential is low in developed societies and how it might increase if the middle classes lose their share of resources. He notes the beginnings of this shift, but says that the overall positive emotions of the middle class have not yet transitioned from positive to negative. Capitalism will persist, but it will be a reformed capitalism, especially in the United States, as taxes and regulation by government assure higher levels of resource redistribution to members of a society.

Jonathan H. Turner is distinguished professor of sociology at the University of California- Riverside, USA and university professor, University of California, USA. He is the author or coauthor of thirty-five books and seven edited books. His works include Contemporary Sociological Theory, Theoretical Sociology: From 1830 to the Present, and The Emergence of Sociological Theory.

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