A. Industrial Stratification
1. Although initially, industrialization in England raised the overall standard of living, factory owners soon began to recruit cheap labor from among the poorest populations.
2. Marx saw this trend as an expression of a fundamental capitalist opposition: the bourgeoisie (capitalists) versus the proletariat (propertyless workers).
3. According to Marx, the bourgeoisie owned the means of production and promoted industrialization to maintain their position, consequently intensifying the dispossession of the workers (a process called proletarianization).
4. Weber argued that Marx’s model was oversimplified and developed a model with three main factors contributing to socioeconomic stratification: wealth, power, and prestige (see previous chapter).
5. Class consciousness (Marx) is the recognition of a commonalty of interest and identification with the other members of one’s economic stratum.
6. With considerable modification, it is recognized that a combination of the Marxian and Weberian models may be used to describe the modern capitalist world.
7. The distinction, core-semiperiphery-periphery, is used to describe a worldwide division of labor and capital ownership, but it is pointed out that the growing middle class and the existence of peripheries within core nations complicate the issue beyond the vision of Marx or Weber.
B. Poverty on the Periphery
1. With the expansion of capitalism into the periphery, most of the local landowners have been displaced from their land by large landowners who in turn hired the displaced people at low wages to work the land they once owned.
2. Bangladesh is a good example of this in which British colonialism increased stratification, as only a few landowners own most of the land.
C. Malaysian Factory Women
1. To combat rural poverty, the Malaysian government has encouraged large international companies to set up labor-intensive manufacturing operations in rural Malaysia.
2. Factory life contrasts sharply with the traditional customs of the rural Malaysians.
3. Aihwa Ong has studied the effect of work in Japanese electronics factories on Malaysian women employees.
4. Severe contrasts between the work conditions and the culture of the women generate alienation, which results in stress.
5. This stress has been manifested as possession by weretigers, which expresses the workers’ resistance, but has as yet effected little change in the overall situation.
6. Ong argues that spirit possession is a form of rebellion and resistance that enable factory women to avoid direct confrontation with the source of their distress.
7. Spirit possessions were not very effective at bringing about improvements in the factory conditions, and actually they may help maintain the current conditions by operating as a safety valve for stress.
D. Open and Closed Class Systems
1. Formalized inequalities have taken many forms, such as caste, slavery, and class systems.
2. Caste systems are closed, hereditary systems of stratification that are often dictated by religion (the Hindu caste systems of the Indian subcontinent are given as an example).
3. South African apartheid is given as comparable to a caste system, in that it was ascriptive and closed through law.
4. State sanctioned slavery, wherein humans are treated as property, is the most extreme form of legalized inequality.
5. Vertical mobility refers to the upward or downward change in a person's status.
a. Vertical mobility exists only in open class systems.
b. Open class systems are more commonly found in modern states than in archaic states.
E. Interesting Issues: Troubles in Swooshland
1. Beginning with a segment on 48 Hours in 1996, Nike came under attack for using sweatshop labor in Vietnam to bolster their profits in the U.S.
2. In response to the criticism, Nike adopted new labor policies with regard to wages, working conditions, maximum hours in a workweek, and minimum age for employment.
F. Beyond the Classroom: The Residue of Apartheid in Southern Africa.
1. During six months of travel in southern Africa, Chanelle MacNab came to see that Afrikaners were not as bad as their stereotypes portray them.
2. She found that even though apartheid had been formally dissolved, its legacy was found throughout southern Africa.