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The American Perception of Class: Tables

The American Perception of Class
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table of contents
  1. Cover
  2. Series Page
  3. Title Page
  4. Copyright
  5. Dedication
  6. Foreword
  7. Contents
  8. Tables
  9. Figures
  10. Acknowledgments
  11. 1. American Exceptionalism
  12. 2. Blaming the Victim: Psychological Reductionism in Class Theory
  13. 3. Class Divisions and Status Rankings: The Social Psychology of American Stratification
  14. 4. Who Is Working Class?
  15. 5. Class Images
  16. 6. The Decline of Social Class?
  17. 7. U.S. and British Workers: Same Consciousness, Different Opportunities
  18. 8. Docile Women? Pin Money, Homemaking, and Class Conflict
  19. 9. Fear and Loathing? Ethnic Hostility and Working-Class Consciousness
  20. 10. Militant Blacks? The Persistent Significance of Class
  21. 11. The American Dream
  22. 12. Reversing the Focus: Capitalist Strength and Working-Class Consciousness
  23. References
  24. Index

TABLES

1.1. Government ownership of basic industry in nine countries

1.2. Class support (voting) for Left parties in eight democracies

4.1. Effects of self-employment on class perceptions

4.A. Means and standard deviations

4.B. Probit analyses of class perceptions: class and status variables

4.C. Probit analyses of class perceptions: DOT-defined authority

5.A. Scaling perceived occupational differences

6.1. Cohort averages on class position, family income, and education

6.2. Manager-nonmanager differences in class perceptions among four birth cohorts

6.3. Structural changes in the United States: 1952–78

7.1. Class and status in Great Britain and the United States

7.2. Effects of class and status on British and U.S. class perceptions

7.A. Probit analyses of class self-placements in the United States and Great Britain

7.B. Discriminant function analyses of party affiliations

7.C. Regressions of party scales on class placements and socioeconomic variables

7.D. Discriminant function analyses of voting choices

8.1. Gender differences in attitudes toward unions

8.2. Sample sizes: combinations of gender, marital status, and spouse’s class

8.3. Joint effects of own and spouse’s position on class perceptions

8.A. Sample sizes: combinations of gender, marital status, and spouse’s class

8.B. Joint effects of own and spouse’s position on class perceptions

8.C. Unadjusted middle-class placements

8.D. Probit analyses of class perceptions with all spouse interaction terms

9.1. Closeness to workingmen among working-class Protestants and Catholics

9.2. Strength of ethnic effects on class perceptions, before and after controls for class position and socioeconomic status

9.3. Manager-nonmanager differences in class perceptions among Protestants and Catholics

9.A. Sample sizes of 18 ethnic groups

10.1. Black sample sizes and middle-class self-placements

10.2. Effects of managerial position on Black class perceptions

10.3. Changes in social position of Blacks, 1952–78

10.A. Probit equations for mental-manual effects on Blacks’ middle-class self-placements

10.B. Probit coefficients for effects of several class divisions on Blacks’ middle-class self-placements

10.C. Probit analyses of class perceptions by race

10.D. Explaining changes in Blacks’ middle-class self-placements

11.1. Adjusted regional differences in class perceptions

11.2. Effects of geographic mobility on class perceptions

11.3. Class perceptions by own and father’s occupation

11.4. Effects of upward, downward, and no mobility on class perceptions

11.A. Adjusted class placements by own and father’s occupation

11.B. Adjusted class placements of the upwardly mobile, downwardly mobile, and stable

11.C. Adjusted effects of upward, downward, and no mobility

12.1. Use of federal troops to end strikes

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