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Culture, Labor, History Series

Class Unknown: Undercover Investigations of American Work and Poverty from the Progressive Era to the Present

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2013 Notable Title in American Intellectual History from the Society for U.S. Intellectual History

Since the Gilded Age, social scientists, middle-class reformers, and writers have left the comforts of their offices to pass as steel workers, coal miners, assembly-line laborers, waitresses, hoboes, and other working and poor people in an attempt to gain a fuller and more authentic understanding of the lives of the working class and the poor. In this first, sweeping study of undercover investigations of work and poverty in America, award-winning historian Mark Pittenger examines how intellectuals were shaped by their experiences with the poor, and how despite their sympathy toward working-class people, they unintentionally helped to develop the contemporary concept of a degraded and other American underclass.
While contributing to our understanding of the history of American social
thought, Class Unknown offers a new perspective on contemporary debates over how we understand and represent our own society and its class divisions.

288 pages, Paperback

First published July 1, 2012

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Mark Pittenger

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