What does privilege look like today? How do the advantaged perform “ease”? And why do some of us feel at home in elite spaces, while others feel awkward? Princeton sociologist Shamus Khan joins Uncommon Sense to reflect on elites, entitlement and more. Reminding us that “poor people are not why there’s inequality; rich people are why there’s inequality”, he highlights the importance of studying elites for studying inequality, as the gap between the two grows.
Being the author of Privilege: The Making of an Adolescent Elite at St Paul’s School (2011), Shamus tells Rosie and Alexis about how the way elites justify and see their position has shifted – and how a disability studies perspective helps us to cast a critical eye on the “ease” with which the few seem to nimbly navigate elite institutions. What seems like some of us “have it” and others “just don’t” is, suggests Shamus, socially produced – and what appears to be a “flat” and open world, ripe for the bold to seize, is really far more complex.
Plus: why might people who share the same knowledge be valued differently when that knowledge is held in different – racialised, minoritised – bodies? Also: why TV shows and movies about elites don’t stop at Saltburn, Succession and The Kardashians?
Guest: Shamus Khan
Hosts: Rosie Hancock, Alexis Hieu Truong
Executive Producer: Alice Bloch
Sound Engineer: David Crackles
Music: Joe Gardner
Artwork: Erin Aniker
Find more about Uncommon Sense
Episode Resources
From The Sociological Review
- Spatial Delight: Space Invaders – N. Puwar, A. Lisiak
- Uncommon Sense: Taste – I. Karademir Hazir, R. Hancock, A. H. Truong
- ‘Talent-spotting’ or ‘social magic’? Inequality, cultural sorting and constructions of the ideal graduate in elite professions – N. Ingram, K. Allen
By Shamus Khan
- Privilege: The Making of an Adolescent Elite at St. Paul's School
- Saying Meritocracy and Doing Privilege (co-authored with Colin Jerolmack)
- How Cultural Capital Emerged in Gilded Age America (co-authored with Fabien Accominotti, Adam Storer)
Further reading
- “Flexible Citizenship” – A. Ong
- “Space Invaders” – N. Puwar
- “Learning to Labour” – P. Willis
- “Understanding audience segmentation” – R. Peterson
- “Reality Television and Class” – B. Skeggs, H. Wood
- “‘Oh goodness, I am watching reality TV’: How methods make class in audience research” – B. Skeggs, N. Thumim, H. Wood
- “Capital in the 21st Century” – T. Piketty
Read more about Shey O’Brien, Fabien Acconomoti, Pierre Bourdieu and Frantz Fanon.
Support our work. Make a one-off or regular donation to help fund future episodes of Uncommon Sense: donorbox.org/uncommon-sense
03/15/24 • 48 min
Uncommon Sense - Privilege, with Shamus Khan
Transcript
Rosie Hancock 0:05
Hi, I'm Rosie Hancock in Sydney, Australia.
Alexis Hieu Truong 0:08
And I'm Alexis Hieu Truong, in Ottawa/Gatineau Canada. And welcome back to Uncommon Sense from the Sociological Review foundation. It's where we take everyday terms that seem pretty simple, things that we might use in everyday life, like, say – success, anxiety, or the idea of good tastes – and kind of pause to see them more critically, and to give them a soci
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