Available Formats
Uneasy Street: The Anxieties of Affluence
By (Author) Rachel Sherman
Princeton University Press
Princeton University Press
6th November 2017
United States
General
Non Fiction
Urban communities
Popular culture
305.5
Hardback
328
Width 152mm, Height 235mm
567g
A surprising and revealing look at how today's elite view their own wealth and place in society From TV's "real housewives" to The Wolf of Wall Street, our popular culture portrays the wealthy as materialistic and entitled. But what do we really know about those who live on "easy street" In this penetrating book, Rachel Sherman draws on rare in-d
"There's a lot of abstract talk about the 1 percent, but how do they really live The sociologist Rachel Shermans new book, Uneasy Street: The Anxieties of Affluence, draws on her interviews with 50 wealthy New Yorkers to give us a sense. Sherman takes a dispassionate approach to find out how those who are 'benefitting from rising economic inequality' experience 'their own social advantages.' She elicits her subjects thoughts about work and productivity, charitable giving, marital discord and more. Worthwhile humanizing ensues, as do plenty of squirm-inducing moments."---John Williams, New York Times Book Review
"We dont know as much about affluent people as we think we do. Caricatures abound, but the socioeconomically lucky dont often offer themselves up for study. That all changed with Rachel Shermans Uneasy Street. Nominally a sociologist, Sherman has written what is really a psychological study, and Ive found myself returning to it frequently to remind myself of uncomfortable questions that lurk just below the surface of the lives of people who have much more than average. . . . The voyeurism here is minimal; the judgment nearly nonexistent. But with each reading, Im a little more unsettled, in the best possible way."---Ron Lieber, New York Times
"Ms. Sherman's book does take absorbing measure of what has become a corrosive reality in New York: the tendency among well-off people to regard their circumstances as entirely ordinary 'Manhattan poor' as others have put it."---Ginia Bellafante, New York Times
"Sherman offers something new and surprising: a look inside the 1 per cent's minds. . . . She shifts our understanding of todays dominant class."---Simon Kuper, Financial Times
"There have been many cogent analyses of income inequality. Sociologist Rachel Sherman's welcome addition probes the psychology and socio-economics of affluence."---Barb Kiser, Nature
"Sherman's analysis is informative, insightful, and nuanced."---Glenn Altschuler, Psychology Today
"Although it is easy to judge the rich for [their] 'anxieties', Rachel Sherman suggests that this often distracts us from examining the wider 'systems of distribution that produce inequality'."---Matthew Reisz, Times Higher Education
"Uneasy Street is an important book. It is an all too rare empirical study of how the rich see themselves."---Daniel Ben-Ami, Spiked Review
Rachel Sherman is associate professor of sociology at the New School for Social Research and Eugene Lang College. She is the author of Class Acts: Service and Inequality in Luxury Hotels and Sherman lives in New York.