About This Book
An analysis of how social prestige is produced and maintained through nonproductive display, arguing that privileged groups secure respect by avoiding industrial labor and by visibly expending wealth through conspicuous leisure and consumption. The author examines pecuniary emulation across dress, taste, education, religion, and ceremonial life, showing how monetary motives shape aesthetic standards and perpetuate archaic traits such as ritualized prowess, belief in luck, and devout observances. Chapters trace the influence of a pecuniary standard on industry and conservatism, the function of fashion and higher learning as status signals, and the cultural mechanisms that conserve class privilege.
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