Wealth, Whiteness, and the Matrix of Privilege: The View from the Country Club

Wealth, Whiteness, and the Matrix of Privilege: The View from the Country Club

by Jessica Holden Sherwood
Wealth, Whiteness, and the Matrix of Privilege: The View from the Country Club

Wealth, Whiteness, and the Matrix of Privilege: The View from the Country Club

by Jessica Holden Sherwood

Paperback(Reprint)

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Overview

Exclusive social clubs are traditionally an important site for the consolidation of upper-class power. Wealth, Whiteness, and the Matrix of Privilege shows that while the particulars of admission have changed, these clubs remain socially significant incubators. Having interviewed typically inaccessible members of exclusive clubs in the Northeast, Jessica Holden Sherwood reports and analyzes what they have to say about who is in, who is out, and why. The members talk frankly about their exclusiveness based on money and style, but they are quick to point out that ethnically-based exclusion is a thing of the past. Club members also address the status of their women members, which is at times distinctly second-class. The talk of country club members is shown to draw on elements in popular discourse. And even if it's not their intention, as club members exclude and account for their exclusion, they contribute to reproducing class, race, and gender inequalities.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739182963
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 03/14/2013
Edition description: Reprint
Pages: 180
Product dimensions: 5.97(w) x 8.95(h) x 0.56(d)

About the Author

Jessica Holden Sherwood is assistant professor of social sciences at Johnson & Wales University.

Table of Contents

Chapter 1. Business and Pleasure: The Social Context of Exclusive Clubs Chapter 2. Denials and Justifications: Club Members Account for Exclusivity Chapter 3. "Similar But Diverse:" Explaining Race and Ethnicity in the Clubs Chapter 4. Gender Accounts, Or Why the Golf Course is the Dads' Domain Chapter 5. Conclusion Chapter 6 Methodological Appendix

What People are Saying About This

G William Domhoff

This rare and informative interview study of members of high-status social clubs fully reveals the clubs' role in generating the social and cultural capital that help maintain class dominance in the United States.

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