4 class representation final dp

21
Do Now Do Now – look at the item on the post-it notes and attach it to one of the four main class classifications. Discuss – what factors can help define what class a person falls into?

Upload: ppermaul

Post on 20-Jul-2015

113 views

Category:

Documents


3 download

TRANSCRIPT

Page 1: 4 class representation final dp

Do Now

• Do Now – look at the item on the post-it notes and attach it to one of the four main class classifications.

• Discuss – what factors can help define what class a person falls into?

Page 2: 4 class representation final dp

What class?

Page 3: 4 class representation final dp

Representation In TV Drama

Learning Objective: Build notes on representations of class.

Page 4: 4 class representation final dp

‘Classy’…• Questions for the lesson:

• What does social class mean? • Is class solely to do with money?• What factors determine your social

class?• What does socio-economic class mean? • How does the media, particularly

television drama represent class?

Page 5: 4 class representation final dp

Starter- Class and media

• Task: recap questions about class. What did we say about media celebs and class?

• https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=K2k1iRD2f-c

Page 6: 4 class representation final dp

Class classifications• Underclass: the chronically unemployed and have been for generations,

live in council houses

• Working class: the labouring class without formal professional qualifications.

• Middle class: acquired a comfortable lifestyle. Worked for relative financial security. Often formally qualified. Upper middle class (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Social_structure_of_Britain#Upper_middle_class)

• Upper class: the main owners of land and inherited wealth. Represent a tiny minority.

• Any questions on these classifications?• Can you change class?• How do you trace your class roots?• If you migrate to this country, where do you fit in?

Page 7: 4 class representation final dp

What do we know about Social Class in UK?

• Britain is noted for having a deep rooted class system that dates back hundreds of years.

• It is thought that as long as Britain remains a sovereign nation with a royal family and an aristocracy the issue of class will always be present.

• Britain, for many is still seen as a nation where your class can be either beneficial or an obstacle to success.

• Unlike the US which prides itself on being a meritocracy were anyone from any background can be successful.

Page 8: 4 class representation final dp

Social- economic demographics

• Traditionally the way of measuring social class was according to the job of the main ‘breadwinner’. The classifications are as follows:

• A: high ranking professionals; lawyers, doctors etc.• B: middle ranking professionals; middle managers in business,

teachers etc• C1: ‘white collar’ office workers, clerks, semi and nurses etc.• C2: skilled manual workers; carpenters, electricians.• D: semi and unskilled manual workers; drivers, labourers, cleaners

etc.• E: people on state benefits, the unemployed, pensioners etc

• Of course it might be easier to think in terms of upper, middle and lower classes, which letter goes with which class?

Page 9: 4 class representation final dp

‘Downtown Abbey’ – all about class?

What can we say about how class is represented in these still shots?

Page 10: 4 class representation final dp

Class representation analysis- ‘Downton Abbey’

• A period drama set between the wars.

• Depicts the aristocracy and working class – the middle-classes feature much less

• Take notes on how the representation of class is constructed using

• Mise-en-scene

• Cinematography

• Sound

• Editing

Page 12: 4 class representation final dp

Problems?• What are the problems with the classification

system of classing by job and economic status?

• Doesn’t tell us how much money people earn. e.g.: a carpenter might earn more than a teacher.

• Doesn’t tell us how much money each household is spending so no indication of actually how rich they are.

• It only relates to the main household ‘breadwinner’. What about households with several earners.

• Is the theory of social economic class an outdated concept in the UK today?

Page 13: 4 class representation final dp

Find the place:

WalesEssexCornwallBirminghamNewcastleLiverpool

Page 14: 4 class representation final dp

Region

•How can we simply divide regions of the country?•Geographically?•The south•The north•London•Yorkshire etc….

•Types of living areas?•Inner city•Rural•Suburbs•Coast

Page 15: 4 class representation final dp

• Brainstorm some stereotypes of the following:

• People who live in the city.• People who live in rural areas.• People who live in the north.

• The ‘North / South’ divide?• This is an often ‘over simplified’ and stereotyped as

the rich middle class south and the poor working class north.

Page 16: 4 class representation final dp

The Street Analysis

• BBC series produced from 2006 to 2009

• Set in an unnamed street in Manchester

• Take notes on:– How are working class Northerners

represented? – In what ways are they stereotyped? How much

of this is to do with them being working class and how much to do with them being northern?

Page 17: 4 class representation final dp

‘Benidorm’

• A Bafta award winning comedy drama set in the Spanish holiday resort of Benidorm.

• In what ways does it represent class?

• Consider icons of class.

• What other class stereotypes can you identify?

• Consider the issue of regionality

Page 18: 4 class representation final dp

Shameless - Analysis

• Using the sheet on page 193 of your handbook watch the clip from Shameless.

• How are working class Northerners represented?

• In what ways are they stereotyped? How much of this is to do with the family being working class and how much to do with them being northern?

Page 19: 4 class representation final dp

• Formal clothing – social manners and expectation• Associations between classical music and class• Antiques

• Silver service• Pets• Women in kitchen (“below the stairs”)

• How addressed (polite, formal, respectful)• RP (received pronunciation) – aka “Queen’s English”) – vs regional northern accents• Social rules and expectations – no sex before marriage

• Maid in formal uniform when interacting with members of the family (vs less formal clothes when “under the stairs”)

• Relation between classes

• Low key lighting (below the stairs)• High key lighting (above the stairs)• Servants’ bell, shot of maid walking up the stairs – symbolism of the stairs• Pictures (portraits of ancestry? – inherited wealth/status/title?), marble…

• Social etiquette – preserving social reputation• Movement towards a fairer society (school leaving age rising from 11 to 14) but servants de-humanised (by

member of older generation) – “servants are human beings too” – “only in their time off”

• Adjectives for mise-en-scene? Opulent, lavish, ornate, luxurious, expensive, regal• Patriarchy (both above and below the stairs)• Grand Hotel – street outside (man with placard advertising Liverpool-Sunderland match – associations then of

football with the working classes)

• Juxtaposition of settings and locations (e.g. movement from above to below the stairs)• “Landed gentry”• Clothes: hat, gloves, long dresses, tweed suit

• Hierarchies within hierarchies (e.g. amongst the servants – Carson treated with respect by other servants)• Chandelier

Page 20: 4 class representation final dp
Page 21: 4 class representation final dp

Keywords brainstorm

• Stereotypes – subvert or conform

• Connotes – what something stands for

• Protagonist

• Antagonist

• Patriarchy

• Matriarchy

• Status/authority