Oddly enough, the benefits he conferred upon the common people had the result of weakening the aristocracy, the social class from which he came. |
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Urbanization encouraged commercialized leisure, stratified by social class and varying among different immigrant groups. |
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While this contrast underlines the difference in social class, the point is one of vulnerability and penetrability. |
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The sample of 70 stay-at-home fathers was very diverse in terms of occupations, social class, and education levels. |
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Arembepe was now divided by social class, occupation, neighborhood, place of origin, and religion. |
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What does this picture of the impacts across social class mean for public policy? |
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We are all socialized by our environment and social class rather than our dreams and hopes. |
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Not surprisingly, bigger discrepancies were prevalent in the social class of readers. |
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It doesn't matter which social class or part of town the clubbers come from, nor does it matter how much they earn. |
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In the past, most people had arranged marriages to someone of the same social class. |
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It has a character who has had all the erogenous zones of her body enhanced in order to move up the social class system. |
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Their accent depends on social class and region of the country from which they came. |
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I would argue that racism is neither reducible to social class or gender nor wholly autonomous. |
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For all their crafty appeals to lower-middle-class grouses, fascist regimes left existing patterns of property and social class largely intact. |
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In fact, gun ownership or enjoyment of sport shooting doesn't seem to be tied to wealth or social class at all. |
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The runners, who collected taxes, delivered communications, and arrested and jailed criminals, belonged to a lower social class. |
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But Fielding, as astute an observer of social class as Austen, was actually writing satire. |
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The findings, in terms of ethnicity and social class differences, are stark. |
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Clearly, he feels that many of his duties are beneath him and he chooses to associate with members of his own social class. |
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A person's condition in life was marked most of all by their age, gender, and social class. |
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The character described is gently born and enjoys all the grandeurs expected of someone in her social class. |
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Networks may cut across social class boundaries and they may also reveal differences within social classes. |
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She was lured away from her lover and her social class, and then preyed upon by men who believed wealth can and does control everything. |
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Apparently you can tell your social class by the way your sofas are arranged. |
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Income was overwhelmingly seen as the number one determinant of social class in New Zealand. |
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Mrs. Higgins reminds them that they should consider what they are going to do with this woman who they have educated beyond her social class. |
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One fairly crude estimation of social mobility can be arrived at by comparing social class of origin with that of destination. |
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We also discriminate based on other peoples' race, religion, ethnic origin, gender or social class among ourselves. |
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The theme of social class weaves through all of those pieces, but so do great doses of humor and irony. |
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I am offering an ethic of authenticity, removing all excuses that some philosophers attach to us like barnacles, blaming parents, climate, social class, whatever. |
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Matches are often made between cousins, second cousins, or other family members, or if not, at least between members of the same tribe and social class. |
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Standard of living and occupation were not the only determinants of a person's social class. |
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She brings up many a valid point throughout the prologue but Chaucer voids her opinion because of her social class and looks when in truth she is actually wise. |
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As Charles Murray noticed decades ago and demographers have known for some time, the structure of families has diverged drastically by social class. |
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This commonly accepted scenario arises from important differences between the class-dominant patrifocal family and the lower social class matrifocal family. |
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A positive effect indicates that bridegrooms from that denomination are over-represented within a social class, whereas a negative effect indicates an under-representation. |
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Concentration on two quite different local societies yields important insights into the relations between partisan loyalties, landowning, rural social class, and ethnicity. |
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The precursors of classical political economy were, of course, the physiocrats, who articulated a concept of social class on the basis of a series of theoretical deductions. |
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In a country in which broken homes, absentee parents and latchkey kids are endemic to every social class, he can touch some of the hottest emotional buttons. |
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Most relevant to this essay is Bourdieu's idea of social class fractions that depend on the composition of their three capitals, cultural, social, and economic. |
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This comic novel, though antic rather than earnest, very different in style and tone from Naipaul, is serious about race, social class, immigrants, and outsiders. |
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He first played cricket for a club in Trinidad called Stingo, which included players from the lowest social class. |
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It has been suggested that snowballing may undersample social isolates, those of low education, social class, or income, as well as social deviants. |
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A means of mass communication, the postcard was quickly adopted by every social class. |
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Women's personal autonomy with regard to access to health-care services depended on their social class. |
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The extent of this clustering was similar in all four social class groups. |
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Now social class as represented by first, second and steerage, and the appalling conditions of the stokehold is the prominent concern. |
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To be able to progress, succeed in society without being hindered by the barrier of social class or privilege. |
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With few exceptions, persons were born into a social class and racial group which determined where they would die as well. |
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Like a lepidopterist, Sander captured and classified his fellow Germans, arranging them by profession, social class and family relationships. |
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Women from the peasant class suffer both as members of their social class as well as from denial of rights and status on the basis of gender. |
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Furthermore, livestock keeping implies sophisticated knowledge and skills, often shared across gender, social class, generations and cultures. |
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This simulacra universe questions mischievously the relations between social class and taste, while challenging interpretation. |
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Among the lowest social class, the rise over this period is 11 percentage points. |
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All the people born in the same social class are sharing the same role in the past and in the future. |
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Casting aside the codes of social class, she laughs at convention, audaciously affirming her personality. |
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It is clear that by continuing to recruit disproportionately from the more affluent groups in society, higher education is exacerbating social class divides. |
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It is this social class that is getting the juiciest benefits from the changes in the Mexican Political Constitution. |
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More detailed information on social class was available in the Wisconsin court-based study. |
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Mannheim believed that social class frames one's understanding of reality, whether one is a member of the working class or part of the elite. |
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It's hard to find it these days, but there used to be a social class of slaves. |
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But the way women organized their daily chores was governed largely by where they lived and their social class. |
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The current crisis is however likely to have a significant adverse impact on this fragile new social class, pushing part of it back into poverty. |
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What seems at first to be novel about gender inequity gradually reveals itself to be a parable about social class. |
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For this reason education should be different in accordance with the social class to which the student should be related. |
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The manipular army was based upon social class, age and military experience. |
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In 107 BC, all citizens, regardless of their wealth or social class, were made eligible for entry into the Roman army. |
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Convention is followed when the Knight begins the game with a tale, as he represents the highest social class in the group. |
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As a social class generally, freed slaves were libertini, though later writers used the terms libertus and libertinus interchangeably. |
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But poshness only really matters if it matters to voters if Britons favour politicians of a social class close to their own, or at least if class seems to steer voting behaviour. |
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A study of three London primary schools has found that children are more likely to pal up with kids from different ethnic backgrounds than with children who are in a different social class. |
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The way in which everyone has to rub along with everyone else regardless of age, social class and general weirdness? |
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Despite the opposition of the Church due to the pagan elements of the procession, its successive bans did nothing to stop it spreading to the rest of the region and permeating every social class. |
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But in its careful delineation of individual characters, the painting also suggests that every man and woman, of whatever social class, needs work as a kind of soul medicine. |
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As well, social class had a major impact on perceptions of virility: young people from disadvantaged backgrounds viewed virile characteristics much more positively than youths from more advantageous backgrounds. |
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The Kinsey studies showed considerable social class differences in sexuality in the United States, chiefly in that the lower class was more tolerant of nonmarital coitus. |
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Until the middle of the XIXth century, the mediterranean coast is mostly the favorite vacation site for the upper social class where sicks and personalities spend their winter. |
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It could turn out that our plutocrats as a social class will decide to play the status game of spend-their-money-and-change-the-world rather than enrich great-grandchildren that they will never see. |
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Ninety percent of these single parent families are lone mothers, mainly black women or refugees whose life experiences are ones of racial, gender and social class oppressions. |
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Some rules, like the wearing of hats in all circumstances in the 19th century, encouraged social conformity and transcended age, wealth and social class. |
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But what about social class and background? |
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The behaviour of America's leaders is only the reflection of the behaviour of an entire social class which monopolises the means of production of the entire planet, in the United States, in Europe and elsewhere. |
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A social class conflict will be very slow to develop because of the absence of a middle class not tied to state service, and because of the collapse of the CPSU as a workers' party. |
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The distinction used to be made along social class lines. |
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As with many terms describing social class, working class is defined and used in many different ways. |
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This subjective approach allows people, rather than researchers, to define their own social class. |
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In the English provinces of the early 20th century, distinctions of social class were taken very seriously. |
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Men in the lowest social class were found to be more prone to bronchitis and have worse and fewer teeth than those in higher social classes. |
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For instance, relationships between popular culture, political control, and social class were early and lasting concerns in the field. |
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Rugby traditionally isn't as prevalent in Connacht however it is less defined on social class. |
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Critics have also seen social class rather than race as being the determining factor in the portrayal of good and evil. |
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Marius relaxed the recruitment policies by removing the necessity to own land, and allowed all Roman citizens entry, regardless of social class. |
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He is a citizen, before being a member of a community or of a social class. |
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Many of these factors however are not universal, and differ by region and social class. |
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It was once defined by exception as an intermediate social class between the nobility and the peasantry of Europe. |
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They can, but do not always reflect the social class, education and urban or rural background of the speaker. |
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They can reflect the social class, education and urban or rural background of speakers, though such indicators are not always reliable. |
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They can, but do not always, reflect the social class, education and urban or rural background of the speaker. |
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Cultivated Australian English has in the past been perceived as indicating high social class or education. |
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Bennet is frequently seen encouraging her daughters to marry a wealthy man of high social class. |
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Meanwhile, the Bingleys present a particular problem for navigating social class. |
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Nicola Allen's essay brings out a connection between the feminine knowledge-seeker's social class and lapsarian shame. |
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A people whose Norman Rockwellian self-image had been indifferent to social class began to change its tune. |
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Genocides target those of a particular race, social class, ethnicity, religion or political leaning. |
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Andean textile weavings were of practical, symbolic, religious, and ceremonial importance and used as currency, tribute, and as a determinant of social class and rank. |
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The second controversy was not one of race but of social class. |
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Relatively recently, the first two have increasingly influenced southern accents outside London via social class mobility and the expansion of London. |
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The Berbers belonged to the lower social class when in Punic society. |
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Hence in the Philippines, the local Nobility, by reason of charge accorded to their social class, acquired greater importance than in the Indies of the New World. |
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An important factor of turning to piracy is one's social class. |
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Moreover, Conrad himself came from a social class that claimed exclusive responsibility for state affairs, and from a very politically active family. |
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Most of the regular clergy were drawn from the nobility, the same social class that served as the recruiting ground for the upper levels of the secular clergy. |
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One's self-perceived level of prestige or social class becomes an integral part of his or her self-concept, leading to further circumscriptions of career possibilities. |
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Brazilian society is more markedly divided by social class lines, although a high income disparity is found between race groups, so racism and classism can be conflated. |
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