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Social Change, the Middle Class and the Emergence of “New Social Movements”: A Critical Analysis

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Social Change, the Middle Class and the Emergence of “New Social Movements”: A Critical Analysis
Author(s)Bagguley, Paul
AbstractMost recent analyses of New Social Movements (NSMs) by British sociologists have concentrated on broad social changes or the middle classes as the key explanatory factors. This paper criticizes recent contributions to the analysis of NSMs which emphasize the development of ‘post-Fordism’ and ‘disorganized capitalism’, and recent attempts to understand NSMs as a reflection of ‘middle class’ interests or values. An alternative theoretical approach is outlined which places at the centre of the analysis the social relations in which NSMs are grounded, and which NSMs seek to transform. In this alternative account the middle classes play the role of ‘traditional intellectuals’, that is, they provide the key social resources for mobilization of NSMs and all social movements.
IssueNo
Pages26-48
ArticleAccess to Article
SourceSociological Review
VolumeNo40
PubDateFebruary1992
ISBN_ISSN0038-0261
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