Retrieved from https://studentshare.org/miscellaneous/1581031-upward-mobility
https://studentshare.org/miscellaneous/1581031-upward-mobility.
Upward Mobility I belong to the middle I fit into the working middle category. I am a 23 years old girl who is living on her own, has two jobs going on simultaneously and likes partying around with friends. “Its not news that the people who manage and live off investments have more income, wealth and political influence than people who must work in order to live” (Faux, 2011). Traveling and hanging out with friends are my hobbies. I have a lot of room to move upward or downward in my social class.
I think that an educated person is primarily personally responsible for whatever social class he/she belongs to. I am educated enough to do two jobs at a time. If I leave either of them, I would not be able to party and shop as much as I do now. This will affect my relationship with friends as I would not get to see them quite often. My friends have always been great source of financial and emotional support for me. I have based my analysis of the social class I belong to on the basis of my perceptions that have fundamentally been shaped by the media.
People who work hard and party at the end of the day and have all the necessities of life are placed in the upper middle class society by the media. Media has played a very important role in shaping our class perceptions. “While textual studies focus on in-depth analysis of particular shows, other researchers have compiled demographic portraits across all television drama programming at a given point in time” (Butsch, 2011). Media influences and encourages the audience to move upwards in their respective social classes by possessing more material.
References:Butsch, R. (2011). Social class and television. Retrieved from http://www.museum.tv/eotvsection.php?entrycode=socialclass. Faux, J. (2011). The global class system. Retrieved from http://www.aflcio.org/mediacenter/speakout/jeff_faux.cfm.
Read More