Middle-class accent, yes. Also, no, techie is not considered blue-collar but college graduates making good money.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
As a non-Brit, economic classes having accents is odd. I thought middle-class roughly meant "vaguely posh bourgeoisie", David Mitchell being the stereotypical example. In most places, if you can tell a person's economic class by their speech, they're unemployable juggalo types.
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Replying to @clifford_banes
It's very much down to accent here. Upper class people can be poor. Working class people can be rich. The middle class breaks into upper middle, middle middle and lower middle. David Mitchell is at the top of middle middle, bottom of upper middle. I am middle middle middle.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
Is middle class vs working class sort of like "acting white" vs "keeping it real"?
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Replying to @clifford_banes
No. Much much older. Predates our racial diversity by centuries. We didn't really have black Brits until the 50s and South Asian Brits until the 80s. They kind of slot in to pre-existing categories depending on their British accent.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
I meant in the American context, as in a reluctance to self-gentrify by adopting the language and dress of a group previously above yours, even though such social mobility is readily available.
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Replying to @clifford_banes
No, that context doesn't work here. Your history is very specific with blacks & whites living alongside each other with blacks as a lower class for centuries. Our racial issues align more with American attitudes to Asians - east and south.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
Although, we have the colonial history which necessarily assumes superior status, it was assumed from afar & is less entrenched in daily interactions with fellow Brits seen as a subclass.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
Only 3% of Brits are black while 7.5% are South Asian. Assumptions about South Asians range from 'Doctor' to 'Cornershop owner' to 'terrorist' which has certain class connotations but they are not primary. South Asians are more likely to be successful & professional than whites.
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Replying to @HPluckrose
Black Brits are more likely to be working class as many came to do menial jobs after the fall of the empire. South Asians, particularly Indians, came to be doctors, engineers & set up small businesses. Refugees complicate this, obviously.
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There can be a reluctance to westernise but this is not seen as 'gentrification.'
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