Aronowitz, Stanley. How Class Works: Power and Social Movement.

AuthorCarlson, Arvid J.
PositionBook Review

Aronowitz, Stanley. How Class Works: Power and Social Movement. New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2003. vii + 263 pp. Cloth, $29.95; paper, $17.00.

Whatever happened to Marxism in America? Did the United States ever have a truly classless society? These are implicit questions that Stanley Aronowitz, Professor of Sociology at the City University of New York Graduate Center, sets out to explore in How Class Works. His efforts are directed toward redefining the Left or, more precisely, to identify the "new social activists" operating largely outside the American labor movement, the latter of which he believes has failed its membership. Completed in eight rather dense chapters, Aronowitz nonetheless employs a good turn of phrase and writes at a level that serious students of the social sciences should appreciate.

Aronowitz's real argument is with the American labor unions' refusal to become a true social movement (Chapter 2). Along the way, nonetheless, he provides an excellent review of labor history and its struggle with "Fordism" (Chapter 3). The thrust of his argument suggests that the American proletariat lost its own autonomy as unions were co-opted by FDR and the New Deal.

Chapter 4 promises a new "class map" which turns out to be the "status groups" of blacks, women, gays, and the disabled, with each group providing its own agenda to constantly shifting "cultural alliances" (read classes). These shifting alliances have changed American politics (organized, the author argues, by "capitalistic logic") with little reflection in the two congressional parties. Aronowitz's cast of villains is the bureaucratic labor leaders in the United States, and he singles out Walter Reuther for having used labor's power allied with capitalism to solve social problems. However, those of us who watched "the Battle of the Underpass" in Dearborn, MI, during the 1930s when Ford's hired police crushed strikers might have difficulty with such characterization of the Reuther brothers.

On the positive side, Chapter 5 details the rise of globalization and...

To continue reading

Request your trial

VLEX uses login cookies to provide you with a better browsing experience. If you click on 'Accept' or continue browsing this site we consider that you accept our cookie policy. ACCEPT