Nothing to declare; identity, shame and the lower middle class

Abstract

Within contemporary literary and cultural studies, little attention has been paid to the lower middle class, described by one scholar as "the social class with the lowest reputation in the entire history of class theory." This article discusses the representation of the lower middle class in both literature and scholarly writing. George Orwell's novels of the 1930s and Hanif Kureishi's The Buddha of Suburbia offer some illuminating perspectives on the British lower middle class, though Orwell's novels also reveal a conspicuous disdain for their subject. This disdain is echoed in much of the scholarly writing on the lower middle class. Decried for its reactionary attitudes by Marxists, the "petite bourgeoisie" also poses problems for a contemporary cultural politics that is based on the idealization of transgression and the romance of marginality. Rather than embodying an outmoded or anachronistic class formation, however, the lower middle class may offer an important key to understanding the contemporary meanings of class.

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