Mar 012012
 

Chav-hate has even trickled into the popular music scene. From the Beatles onwards, working-class bands once dominated rock, and indie music in particular: the Stone Roses, the Smiths, Happy Mondays and the Verve, to take a few popular examples. But is is difficult to name any prominent working-class bands since the heyday of Oasis in the mid 1990s: it is middle-class bands like Coldplay or Keane that now rule the roost in music. ‘There has been a noticeable drift towards middle-class values in the music business,’ says Mark Chadwick, the lead singer of rock band the Levellers. ‘Working-class bands seem to be few and far between.’ Instead there’s an abundance of middle-class impersonations of working-class caricatures, such as the ‘mockney’ style of artists like Damon Albarn and Lily Allen.

(p. 133, Owen Jones: Chavs – The Demonization of the Working Class)

Feb 282012
 

Missat denna. Inte konstigt, då jag inte lyssnar på Patrik Sjöbergs favoritartist så ofta.

När Musikguiden på P3 gjorde ett inslag om GBG-rap så vann denna Majorna-son omröstningen för stans bästa rappare ganska överlägset.

Det är inte svårt att förstå. Han är en utomordengligt teknisk rappare, pratar helt hudlöst om sånt som är viktigt, är uppenbarligen väldigt musikalisk, och lika bra på reggae och visor som på rap. En av få i Sverige som kan sägas göra nåt helt eget, och den person som han presenterar genom sin musik är väldigt lätt att tycka om.

Men i 95% av fallen går reggae och visor bort för mig. Jag älskar Majorna, men inte lika ofta på skiva.

Den här fuxxar jag dock med till 100%. Och freestylen nedan, från Mariaplan.coms julkalender.

Feb 272012
 

Chavs – The Demonization of the Working Class (s. 27) konstaterar Owen Jones att endast en handfull av alla brittiska journalister  har arbetarbakgrund. Över hälften av dem har gått på privatskola, att jämföra med en fjortondel av hela landets befolkning.

En chefredaktör han talar med gissar att medianinkomsten är runt £ 81,000. Den ligger egentligen på £ 21,000.

Hur ser det ut i Sverige?

När klyftorna ökar blir klassresor svårare att fullborda. I medelklassyrken hittar vi medelklasskids, och beskrivningen av världen blir därefter.

Det man inte känner till – förorterna, småstäderna, glesbygden, arbetarklassmiljöer i stort – exotiseras och demoniseras. Att termen white trash blivit vanligare på senare har att göra med detta, liksom en rad andra fenomen.

För några veckor sedan läste jag en undersökning över vilka partier svenska journalister röstar på, men jag tror att klassbakgrund skulle säga mer om deras verklighetsuppfattning. Parlamenterande är, när man tänker efter, trots allt inte mycket mer än en piss i det politiska havet.

Feb 232012
 

“That said, the low status accorded to many non-industrial jobs can be grossly unfair. Part of the problem is that we have developed a distaste for socially useful but poorly paid jobs. This is a spin-off from the new religion of meritocracy, where one’s rank in the social hierarchy is supposedly determined on merit. The problem lies in how to define ‘merit’. The New Economics Foundation (NEF) think-tank published a report in 2009 comparing the social value of different occupations. Hospital cleaners are generally on the minimum wage. However, NEF calculated that – taking into account the fact that they maintain standards of hygiene and contribute to wider health outcomes – they generated over £10 in social value for every £1 they were paid.

Waste recycling workers are another example. They fulfill all sorts of functions, like preventing waste and promoting recycling, as well as re-using goods and keeping down carbon emissions. The NEF model estimated that, for every £1 spent on their wages, another £12 was generated. But when the think-tank applied the same model to City bankers – taking into account the damaging effects of the City’s financial activities – they estimated that for every £1 they were paid, £7 of social value was destroyed.”

(p. 159, Owen Jones: Chavs – The Demonization of the Working Class)

Feb 142012
 

“On the eve of the Thatcherite crusade, half of all workers were trade unionist. By 1995, the number had fallen to a third. The old industries associated with working class identity were being destroyed. There no longer seemed anything to celebrate about being working class. But Thatcherism promised an alternative. Leave the working class behind, it said, and come join the property-owning middle classes instead. Those who failed to do so would have no place in the new Britain.”

“Those working class communities who had been most shattered by Thatcherism became the most disparaged. They were seen as the left-behinds, the remnants of an old world that had been trampled on by the inevitable march of history. There was to be no sympathy for them: on the contrary, they deserved to be caricatured and reviled.

There was a time when working-class people had been patronized, rather than openly despised. (…) Today, they are more likely than not to be called chavs. From salt of the earth to scum of the earth. This is the legacy of Thatcherism – the demonization of everything associated with the working class.”

(citerat från s. 60 respektive s. 71 i Owen Jones Chavs – The Demonization of the Working Class)

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