Class and Politics in Denmark: Are Both Old and New Politics Structured by Class?

Gitte Sommer Harrits, Annick Prieur, Lennart Rosenlund, Jakob Skjøtt-Larsen

Research output: Contribution to journalJournal articleResearchpeer-review

41 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

The trend within studies of voting and political attitudes has been to give less attention to class as a structuring dimension and more to post-material values. The basic argument of this article is that this is a false opposition: The adherence to different sets of values is related to social background, although in complex ways, which can only be discovered with a multidimensional conception of what class is. This conception may be found in Pierre Bourdieu's analytical approach, which we here apply in an analysis of survey data from a Danish city, Aalborg. Data from a survey of political attitudes are here subjected to multiple correspondence analysis (MCA), which reveals a pattern of attitudes that is highly structured by both the old and the new dimensions of politics. Up to this point the results converge with the state of the art. However, the methodology utilized (MCA) allows to link the constructed space of attitudes to a set of indicators based on a two-dimensional conception of social class. On the basis of this analysis the article concludes that the political landscape appears as highly structured by the two principles of social differentiation from Bourdieu’s class model: volume and composition of capital. The conclusion is that social class understood in this way is closely related to both old and new politics, as well as to the propensity to vote for a political party from the left- or right-wing alliance.


Udgivelsesdato: marts
Original languageEnglish
JournalScandinavian Political Studies
Volume33
Issue number1
Pages (from-to)1-27
Number of pages27
ISSN0080-6757
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2010

Keywords

  • class, political attitudes, voting, Denmark, cultural capital, Bourdieu, correspondence analysis

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