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Classism and health inequities: what the body remembers

In: Handbook on the Social Determinants of Health

Author

Listed:
  • Elizabeth McGibbon

Abstract

Classism permeates all the other isms. Its reach deepens health inequities as it intersects across ableism, ageism, genderism, sexism, and racism, to name a few. While avoiding narratives that imply hierarchies of oppression, where one of the isms is seen as more salient than another, this chapter frames classism as a foundational structural oppression that can cut across all the other isms. First, the enduring social organization of class relations is discussed - classism is analysed as an outcome of ruling relations, including the power relations of class conflict that are endemic to capitalism. Using Scambler’s typology of asset/capital flows, working-class interruptions in these flows, across the lifecourse and intergenerationally, are described. Second, the oppression stress of classism is analysed in terms of how it becomes embodied - written into the body, held and corporally remembered. The chapter concludes with an overview of how class oppression is capitalism-induced structural violence.

Suggested Citation

  • Elizabeth McGibbon, 2025. "Classism and health inequities: what the body remembers," Chapters, in: Toba Bryant (ed.), Handbook on the Social Determinants of Health, chapter 13, pages 166-189, Edward Elgar Publishing.
  • Handle: RePEc:elg:eechap:21989_13
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    File URL: https://www.elgaronline.com/doi/10.4337/9781035302093.00021
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