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What is middle class in Ireland

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Comments

  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,563 ✭✭✭dd972


    A pig ignorant tosser in a golf jumper who bought his house in 1973 and sold it in 2004.

    or maybe a jumped up Call Centre Supervisor or HR Manager with a contrived double barrelled name


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,639 ✭✭✭Miss Lockhart


    Greentopia wrote: »
    They are an elite business or Capitalist class, not upper class. JP McManus, Dermot Desmond and others of their ilk usually come from lower middle class or middle class backgrounds. They don't suddenly become upper class because they have lots of money.

    The only real upper class in this country are the Protestant (mainly) Anglo-Irish landed landed class.

    Class is not about money, it's about breeding and education.

    Scratch my previous post so. I remain the underclass.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,563 ✭✭✭dd972


    Greentopia wrote: »

    Class is not about money, it's about breeding and education.

    Tony Benn : 'Class is purely and simply about money'


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,327 ✭✭✭Madam_X


    How do you define underclass?


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,639 ✭✭✭Miss Lockhart


    Madam_X wrote: »
    How do you define underclass?

    Well AH usually define it as dole scrounging, tracksuit wearers.


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  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,655 ✭✭✭delw


    dbrunson wrote: »
    If your TV is smaller than your book shelf your middle class, if your TV is bigger than your book shelf your working class.
    I don't have a book shelf :(


  • Moderators, Education Moderators, Music Moderators Posts: 10,686 Mod ✭✭✭✭melekalikimaka


    i think everyone knows themselves what class they are, and those around them but defining it isnt as easy


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 6,327 ✭✭✭Madam_X


    Well AH usually define it as dole scrounging, tracksuit wearers.
    Does that describe you? :)


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,925 ✭✭✭✭anncoates


    The ones with their balls in an ever- tightening vice.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 4,586 ✭✭✭sock puppet


    dbrunson wrote: »
    If your TV is smaller than your book shelf your middle class, if your TV is bigger than your book shelf your working class.

    I use an e-reader :cool:


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  • Closed Accounts Posts: 2,639 ✭✭✭Miss Lockhart


    Madam_X wrote: »
    Does that describe you? :)

    It describes my family. Not me, but since apparently it's all about breeding...


  • Posts: 6,645 ✭✭✭ Amira Short Locomotive


    Someone once defined "working class" as having a television bigger than your bookcase. Would the converse be true? Working class is having a bookcase bigger than your television?

    Many working, middle class and upper class families are saddled with a heavy amount of post property bubble debt. This has blurred the lines between the classes - no longer will having a large home and an up to date car be considered "doing well". I always defined class on more than wealth, what profession are you in - Construction, Gardai, Judge? What holidays do you go on - boozing in Benidorm or Skiing near the Alps? What books are you reading - Jordan's bio, Dalia Smith's book or Dostoevsky. Class is more than mere wealth, it's in the newspapers we read, the jobs we do and the interests we have.

    Exactly. My Spanish teacher here pretty much called me a retard when I told her I wasn't sure what class my family are. She said 'you're 27 and you don't know what class you are?' I explained that it's complicated.

    All 4 grandparents were working class. My parents both grew up on council estates. Most of my aunts and uncles are working class or on the dole. My parents are a bit of a mixture, as they both went to university (the only ones in their family who did) and have good jobs. They have a mixture of working class and middle class values. We grew up on tinned spaghetti and sausages, were always in second hand clothes and were stuck in front of the TV for hours on end (more working class), but were also taught French and music from a young age, taught to read music and could read and write well before we started school (more middle class). Our usual holidays were over to Ireland on the ferry to stay in my granny's council house, but as we got older, there were also Christmas trips to New York and city breaks to Prague, Paris, Madrid, etc. We went to state primary schools but a private secondary school (we didn't have to pay fees, long story). Really a mixed bag.

    I think a lot of people, especially Spanish people think class is as simple as 'how much money do your parents have?' but it's not that at all, at least not in the UK and Ireland. It's education, the way you speak, the way you dress, the books you read. It's not really about money. When someone asks what class I am, I really don't know what to say. Middle class, I guess, but it feels a bit fraudulent to say it given my family background. There's no 'old money' or inheritances or properties or any of those things I'd associate with being truly middle class.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 1,801 ✭✭✭Ruudi_Mentari


    Merely owning a house according to my jobstownian friend, so... he has been saving for many years and is about to enter the realm of the middle class?!! Just like that.

    and I'll grant him that, but the problem is he views me as mid class for being reared in an eventually paid-off house that backs onto a real dive, so the lines are blurred!!


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,221 ✭✭✭Greentopia


    dd972 wrote: »
    Tony Benn : 'Class is purely and simply about money'

    If Benn is talking about class struggle-as he's a Socialist-then of course money is intrinsic to whether you own the means of production as a capitalist or whether you have to sell your labour power as a worker.

    It is often but not always correlated to money but what he says is too simplistic if he's talking about social strata.

    For example I have little money as I'm a self-employed craft worker mainly and I rent my apartment. So I'm working class? but my parents and their relatives were/are: farmers, shop keepers, photographers, all private home owners and I have a college education. So I'm middle class?
    But my maternal grandmother and all her family were Protestant Anglo-Irish so I'm upper class? :confused::D
    Class distinction in this country is nonsensical really. Most of us are no more than a few generations from picking spuds in the field as my father used to say :pac:


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,221 ✭✭✭Greentopia


    delw wrote: »
    I don't have a book shelf :(

    I don't have a TV :pac:


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 4,916 ✭✭✭shopaholic01


    Greentopia wrote: »
    Most of us are no more than a few generations from picking spuds in the field as my father used to say :pac:
    Class :pac:! No pun intended.


  • Closed Accounts Posts: 13,925 ✭✭✭✭anncoates


    Merely owning a house according to my jobstownian friend, so... he has been saving for many years and is about to enter the realm of the middle class?!! Just like that.

    and I'll grant him that, but the problem is he views me as mid class for being reared in an eventually paid-off house that backs onto a real dive, so the lines are blurred!!

    Does he know you call him 'jobstownian'?


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 2,145 ✭✭✭Katgurl


    Owen_S wrote: »
    Being middle class in Ireland is having decking outside your house. Lots of Celtic Tiger decking.

    It most certainly is not. That is being a sheep and a pretty naff one at that.


  • Registered Users, Registered Users 2 Posts: 3,221 ✭✭✭Greentopia


    Katgurl wrote: »
    It most certainly is not. That is being a sheep and a pretty naff one at that.

    I can almost hear the disdain dripping from that post in your effort to set yourself apart from the vulgar nouveau-riche middle classes with their Celtic Tiger era decking. :pac:


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