Today’s highly unequal US hardly qualifies as sustaining the middle class. The idea of the US as a middle class place required nurturing. Those doing that ideological work—from the business press, to pollsters, to intellectuals celebrating the results of free enterprise—gained little traction until the Depression and Cold War expanded the middle class brand.
Much later, the book’s sections on liberal strategist Stanley Greenberg detail, “saving the middle class” entered presidential politics. Both parties soon defined the middle class to include over 90% of the population, precluding intelligent attention to the poor and the very rich. Resurrecting radical historical critiques of the middle class, Roediger argues that middle class identities have so long been shaped by debt, anxiety about falling, and having to sell one’s personality at work that misery defines a middle class existence as much as fulfillment.
-
“As the nation burns and the future appears uncertain, David Roediger delivers another incisive, timely, clear-eyed analysis of class and race in America. His point is clear: another world won’t be built by pollsters or slick election strategies aimed at saving the middle class. We have to grow a movement. ” —Robin D. G. Kelley
“A consistently pathbreaking historian.” —Monthly Review
“No contemporary intellectual has better illuminated the interwoven social histories and conceptual dimensions of race and class domination.” —Nikhil Singh
“Brilliant and insightful... Explores the ways in which appeals to save the middle class in electoral politics harm the very constituencies they purport to help.” —George Lipsitz -
"[A] useful contribution to our understanding of how for nearly three decades saving the middle-class has preoccupied national political debate, but produced very little in the way of uplift. As The Sinking Middle Class makes painfully clear, the middle layers of the structure of wealth and income have fared abysmally." —California Review of Books
Related blog posts View all related posts
-
The Sinking Middle Class: A Political History of Debt, Misery, and the Drift to the Right
Join David Roediger and Nan Enstad as they challenge the “save the middle class” rhetoric that dominates our political imagination.
Other books of interest
-
Detroit: I Do Mind Dying
by Dan Georgakas and Marvin Surkin -
Socialism . . . Seriously
by Danny Katch -
Fighting Fascism
by Clara Zetkin -
How We Get Free
Edited by Keeanga-Yamahtta Taylor -
The New Authoritarians
by David Renton