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The Origins of the White-Collar Middle Class The Origins of the White-Collar Middle Class
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Once More, Free Once More, Free
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Conclusion: Once More, Free
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Published:January 2010
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Abstract
This concluding chapter reflects on the changing perceptions of clerkship that arose in postbellum America. The Civil War had offered some opportunities for these young men to exercise their manhood where clerkships had failed them. Another method was to apply for the “freedoms” of a wage economy during the postwar period. No longer young men on the make, they would become either union members or company men within hierarchical corporations, depending on their access to that capital. Furthermore, the chapter argues that these nineteenth-century clerks' stories of the self and the social help illustrate how capitalism—including the cultural narratives that tout its opportunities and explain away its inequalities—has shaped Americans' worldviews to this day.
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