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Review: Rigging the Game: How Inequality Is Reproduced in Everyday LifeUser Review - Tamara - GoodreadsOK, this may be a text, but a damn good text. Read full review Review: Rigging the Game: How Inequality Is Reproduced in Everyday LifeUser Review - Shinynickel - GoodreadsReally great, clear explanation on how systems of inequality get set up and maintained, such that most of the people maintaining them don't have to personally support inequality -- may even personally be against it -- they just have to not know about/care enough/or know how to change things. Read full review Related books
Contents
7 other sections not shown Other editions - View allCommon terms and phrasesaccountable activists ahead analysis Apartheid Badass behavior Billy Ray bosses capital capitalists Chapter corporate personhood corporate regimes create culture of solidarity definitions of reality democracy dramaturgical action economic elites equal example exploitation fair feel gender going Haah and Ji happen Heng brothers Howard Winant human idea identity stakes ideology Imagine inequality is reproduced internalized oppression keep kind labor live look male manhood act matter Max Weber mean moral background rules nine families patriarchy peak oil people's Pete problem processes protect questions race racism raider king Rania regime leaders reproduction of inequality rigged game Rigging the Game right-to-work laws side bets social social capital Social Exchange Theory sociological story student Taft-Hartley Act there's things Trager and Rudd truck U.S. society University Press valley wage wealth what's women workers workplace democracy References to this bookFrom Google ScholarNot My Kid: Parents, Teenagers, And Adolescent SexualityGloria Gonzalez-Lopez, Debra J Umberson, Sharmila Rudrappa Bibliographic information |