Everyone knows what I'm talking about, even the few decent politicians we have are constantly bemoaning the "disappearance of the middle class," and we here in lefty land usually have the same response, which goes something like "So your saying the solution to the disparity of rich and poor is to invent a conceptual middle ground and focus all your attention on that, instead of the divide itself. Smells like liberalism to me."

I still agree with this, but I got to thinking the other day, and I think the instinct to talk about the "middle class" may actually be a latent anti-capitalist instinct coming out. This is pretty rough around the edges, it was just a stray train of thought, but the way I see it, Capitalism wants to mediate all human experience through the market, through transaction, through money. People, I think instinctively, feel this tendency to basically flatten all of life, and naturally revolt. Problem is, of course, that to most people, capitalism is unambiguously good, or at the very least, necessary in the same way air is necessary to breathe, and it's difficult to square that contradiction.

This, I think, is where the "middle class" comes in, it is essentially a category of people who live under capitalism, with all that entails, but who instinctively revolt against defining their existence in capitalist terms (i.e. wealth, money, possessions, etc). Rich and poor are both categories defined by their relation to capitalism, whereas the "middle class" is completely nebulous vis-a-vis relations of production, so defining yourself as such opens, or perhaps leaves open, the possibility of identifying your existence in some other fashion. Essentially calling yourself middle class means that you'd prefer not to (:zizek:) think of yourself predominantly in market terms, which is a privilege the truly destitute don't have, hence the connotation of comfortableness associated with it, but I do think it's indicative of an instinct that runs counter to the totalizing nature of capitalism.

Thoughts?

EDIT: Based on many responses, I think I was unclear about something crucial, which is that I’m am referring to the mindset of an average American who isn’t particularly political who passively identifies with the term middle class when invoked by politicians or others.

  • Homestar440 [he/him]
    hexagon
    ·
    há 4 anos

    I believe that you have created a sort of “enlightened centrism” of class awareness.

    This describes pretty well what I’m talking about, but to be more exact, I haven’t so much created it as hypothesized it in the minds of un-class conscious Americans.

    This being said, I do not think that calling oneself “middle class” is anti capitalism

    No, definitely not, but if there’s anything to my shower thought at all, it may be indicative of a sort of instinctive protest at the existence of class or the need to define oneself in terms of class by mentally positioning yourself on safe ground separate from the two obvious class antagonists, rich and poor. This also allows them to see themselves as not political, because the most obvious political conflict involves the other classes, not the middle directly (in their minds, at least). It’s a psychological phenomenon I think I’m describing.

    • dead [he/him]
      ·
      há 4 anos

      This also allows them to see themselves as not political, because the most obvious political conflict involves the other classes, not the middle directly (in their minds, at least).

      This just sounds like you are describing Marx's Theory of Alienation.