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Overclass

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
Pejorative social term
An image from theOccupy Wall Street protests inNew York City, which were partially protests against the perceived overclassWall Street elite

Overclass is apejorative[1][2] term for the most powerful group in a socialhierarchy. Users of the term generally imply excessive andunjustprivilege and exploitation of the rest of society.[3][4][5]

The word is fairly recent, with theOxford English Dictionary including it only in December 2004,[6] but it has been in use since at least 1995. Some writers compare it to the more familiarunderclass:

We now have a quite new phenomenon in the history of the republic: two radically isolated sectors of the population, the underclass and the overclass. Both are in an adversarial posture toward the great majority of Americans, the overclass by virtue of ambition and unbounded self-esteem, the underclass by virtue of social incompetence andanomie. Between the two there is a fearful symmetry on many scores, but their service to each other is far from equal.[7]

The influence of the actions by the overclass have been rigorously studied, particularly with regards to notions of intersections between the overclass and specific races. Most notable of these racial overclasses is theNEWBO, or NEW Black Overclass in America.[8]

Perhaps the most commonly agreed-upon "overclass" consists of leaders ininternational business,finance and thearms trade.[9]

See also

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References

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  1. ^The next American nation: the new nationalism and the fourth American revolution – Michael Lind – Google Books
  2. ^Fighting Poverty, Inequality and Injustice: A Manifesto Inspired by Peter ... - Google Books
  3. ^Chronicles – Rockford Institute – Google Books
  4. ^This Land Is Their Land: Reports from a Divided Nation – Barbara Ehrenreich – Google Books
  5. ^Delight of the Overclass! Demise of the Middleclass! - Jay T. Baldwin - Google Books
  6. ^Quarterly updates to OED Online
  7. ^Farewell to the Overclass 1996Richard John Neuhaus
  8. ^Hawkins, Lee (February 26, 2009)."CNBC Special Report: The New Black Overclass".NBC News.NBCNews.com. Archived fromthe original on March 16, 2014. RetrievedSeptember 7, 2016.
  9. ^Rothkopf, David J. (2008).Superclass: the global power elite and the world they are making.Farrar, Straus and Giroux.ISBN 978-0-374-27210-4.

Further reading

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  • Adler, Jerry (July 31, 1995). "The Rise of the Overclass; The Overclass 100".Newsweek.126 (5):32–46. – Newsweekcover story on "How the new elite scrambled up the merit ladder—and wants to stay there any way it can."

External links

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