bombus wrote:
Conversely I expect people not to judge me on class alone, and I certainly don't feel the need to pretend to be working class if I'm talking to a working class person, or anything like that.
To be honest though, the vast majority of people that I meet (whether at work or not) are white and middle class, and it seems that the same goes for most of them. That just seems to be the way it is.
Bombus,
Sounds like you know where you are. You are dead right about the 'conscious or deliberate' thing though. I bet most of us don't know our own class signals, or don't think about it.
I too am very interested in being what we are and not pretending to be something else. Since retiring (college lecturing) I have drifted away from that scene quite gradually, and find that I make easier choices now.
To my surprise I discover that I had adopted all kinds of trendy pretentions around the college set, which have just drifted away in retirement. I met an old colleague the other day and was amazed at how much I have changed.
It feels kind of Zen.
C.
PS - The pretensions were things about living in certain precise areas of the city, going to certain pubs, music, film, a whole lifestyle thing. It was very doctrinaire. Maybe I was just too impressionable? I mean, I never really liked humus, so why did I eat so much of it?