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Geoffrey G's avatar

Of the many things that moving to and living in Sweden from the United States has taught me, perhaps the most surprising was how quietly status-conscious Swedes are. Here we have the Nordic Social Democracy Par Excellence, subject of satirical maxims about "Jantelagen" (i.e. Tall Poppy Syndrome) and stereotypes that variously flatter Left-Liberal Utopian Dreams about equality on the one hand and Conservative Fever Dreams about grey Marxist sameness on the other. But even here, status and the envy thereof peek through!

Sweden may have extremely low inequality by Gini Coefficient and one of the flattest income inequalities in the world, but Swedes still remain extremely differentiated in both wealth and status. Wealth inequality is actually *higher* than in the United States, a fact that still shocks me.

And the more nebulous matter of status may be equally stratified: Before the neoliberal turn caught up with Sweden in the mid-1990s (helping to spike wealth inequality to the highest levels in Europe) and even at the peak of the Social Democratic Folkhemmet in the 1970s, there were sharp status distinctions and status anxieties largely unnoticed by outside observers. Sweden is one of the few countries in the world with a monarchy, but less known is that it retains an intact aristocracy, too. There is a Baroque mansion, the House of Nobility, at a commanding point on an island right in the middle of the city, where card-carrying aristocrats can host fête or summit, alike. Even less known, perhaps, is the dominance that dynastic family wealth and status (typified by the Wallenbergs) holds over Sweden today. Imagine Medici-era Italy, but with old money funding tech unicorns. Subtler still is the hold that British status signalling and mores hold over Swedes. TV is full of British programming, and with it, very British attitudes about class. Something that seemed paradoxical and discordant to me, at first, but makes perfect sense now.

Walking around extremely segregated and status-stratified Stockholm, you can quickly see that there are high-status areas that stand apart: Östermalm is Stockholm's Upper West Side, Södermalm its Williamsburg, Brooma perhaps Park Slope, Danderyds an Essex or Westchester County, and Lidingö a Sands Point Long Island-type seaside commuter town. Housing in these areas rivals or exceeds prices in the United States' most rarefied zip codes. And the price for entry into the high-status club is jealously guarded by more immaterial means, too.

If you are anyone who's anyone, you will also maintain a summerhouse on the Stockholm Archipelago, where you migrate in July, just as well-heeled New Yorkers make for the Hamptons. There you will engage in sailing and tasteful entertaining, just as if you were on Martha's Vineyard. Some of the "cottages" that will host you are quite grand, but Swede's True Preps know that something more understated confers higher status, still. (The rest of us can watch this ritual play out on TV, where various celebrities will flatter us with a vicarious invite). Now, it may be equally relaxing to take the caravan to lounge around a local lake or take a package holiday to the Canary Islands, but you may feel the need to obscure or even apologize for such mass-tourist, middlebrow activities. (The truly cool kids can deftly manage the mix of high-low culture to brew up a status cocktail even more potent!). In the winter, it's to the mountain retreats in the Alps or Åre for the outdoor activities that precede "After-Ski" (Swedes employ English phrases as a pretension similar to how pompous English speakers pepper their speech with French).

On the other side of the status divide, there are the other places you'd best avoid: marginal, low-income, high-unemployment, high-crime suburbs of the big cities; deindustrializing towns (like my wife is from); and fast-emptying agricultural areas. To a New Yorker, everywhere north of central park is "Upstate" and to a Swede, everywhere north of Stockholm is "Norrland," which is lower-status. Sweden's vast, less-populated, more-industrial Northern two-thirds has been essential for creating the raw materials that under-girded the state's wealth and power, and even today has some the the highest incomes in the country. But, like Northern England, the stark countryside and earthy settlements of Norrland lacks the Southern metropole's cache.

But you can also be far while being close. Marginal suburbs ringing the cities might be right at the edge of Stockholm, Göteborg, and Malmö, and well-connected by Sweden's excellent public transit systems. But they might as well be far beyond the outer reaches of Norrland for how alienated they are from mainstream Swedish society. Again, Netflix hosts plenty of Nordic Noir crime dramas to deepen your anxieties about what goes on there.

Even being from certain low-status neighborhoods can fill a Swede with deep shame (as dramatized in the Netflix miniseries, "The Playlist," about the rise of Spotify and its low-born, Rågsved-native billionaire founder, Daniel Ek). I live in a great, little urbanist area just up the train line from Rågsved, and my Swedish wife is often apologizing for this fact to guests. The *mere proximity* is shameful, you see! In a country where equality reigns, the stain of birth shouldn't have such a hold on people, and yet it does. Another hit Swedish drama on Netflix, "Snabba Cash" ("Fast Cash") plays the upstairs-downstairs contrast between "vulnerable" immigrant suburbs and monied Östermalm for narrative tension in a way very relatable to American (or British) audiences, watching from our own, unequal and status-anxious societies.

The famous Social Democratic Swedish prime minister of the 1960s and 70s, Olaf Palme, was an outspoken Leftist, but also a high-status individual long before he assumed office. Like a Swedish Kennedy or FDR, he was a scion of old money, aristocratic associations, and high-status, elite institutions. For high school, he attended the exclusive Sigtunaskolan Humanistiska Läroverket boarding school outside Stockholm (an inspiration for the setting of another status-driven Netflix series "Young Royals").

Palme is now as famous in death as he was lionized and infamous in life, since the prime minister was shot on a busy street in central Stockholm in a case that remained unsolved until the present. For those unfamiliar with the story, Netflix offers yet another Swedish-produced series ("The Unlikely Murderer") about Palme's killing that follows a prevailing theory about his assassination at the hand of Stig Engström (AKA Skandiamannen or "Skandia Man") and the alleged assassin's various status-anxieties and disappointments. By the show's telling, Engström was born into a "good family" who left him at a Swedish boarding school to rub shoulders with the right people, but became the butt of jokes his whole life, pursued a middling corporate track at Skandia, and resented and coveted "cool-guy" Palme so much that he shot him. He may be the perfect exemplar for "elite overproduction theory" and how it creates surplus elites nursing dangerous status-anxieties.

Flash forward to our present day's political scene, and you could see the rise of the far-right Swedish Democrats, too, through the prism of status competition. SD's voters, like Trump's voters in the United States, are often referred to by academics here as the "left behinds" of Sweden's declining rural and industrial areas. If assassin Engström's murderous delusions and spoiled sense of entitlement were about the frustrations of a "surplus elite" who never achieved the potential of his station, the SD voter's status-anxiety is more about a native working-class and merely-middle-class seeking and failing to find that "normalcy" you referred to. And, here, unlike in the US, they really are the working class: fully half of the largest labor union in Sweden, LO, voted for SD in the last election. These declining-in-status regular Swedes seem to want the respect and stability due to the average worker during the Mid-Century Folkhemmet Era (ironically achieved under the decades-long dominance of the Social Democrats). This persona yearns for the Everyman status they remember their parents and grandparents having. The villains in their narrative are the usual suspects for the far-right: immigrants, globalists, urban elites, etc. Their preferred means of national renewal are a return to various nostalgically remembered things: a Sweden for Swedes, decent pay for honest hard work, revival of nuclear energy, and even (perhaps surprisingly) a stronger welfare state. When you strip away the racism, xenophobia, misogyny, and general thuggishness, you can even understand the appeal! If American Trumpists are said to want a return to the 1950s, Swedish Democrats seem to want a return to the 1970s. The time when people like them still had normal status, if not great income or wealth.

So, if disruptive status anxiety plagues even a country with low income inequality, perhaps status is an even more fundamental driver even than money? If a financially-comfortable middle-manager like Stig Engström could be driven to murder by humiliation and status-frustration, perhaps it wouldn't even be enough if all Swedes were upper-middle-class and materially thriving? Maybe money (either as income or wealth) is merely a means for status? Maybe we could even come up with a way to give more people status, even as it seems a zero-sum good?

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Julian Gough's avatar

A delightfully enthusiastic review, thank you. (I do enjoy a review where the reviewer allows their affection for the writer, and enthusiasm for the book, to spill over, and doesn't try to step back a little from that enthusiasm, or ironise it.)

Oh, and Noah, if you enjoyed this book, and enjoy thinking about these ideas, you might get a lot out of a very short but powerful essay by Brian Eno from his 1995 diary (published by Faber in 1996 as A Year With Swollen Appendices).

There's a PDF of the whole essay here: http://designblog.uniandes.edu.co/blogs/dise2102/files/2008/11/brian-eno-culture-essay.pdf

This is how it opens:

"Let's start here: 'culture' is everything we don't have to do. We have to eat, but we don't have to have 'cuisines', Big Macs or Tournedos Rossini. We have to cover ourselves against the weather, but we don't have to be so concerned as we are about whether we put on Levi's or Yves Saint-Laurent. We have to move about the face of the globe, but we don't have to dance. These other things, we choose to do. We could survive if we chose not to."

And it ends up in some interesting places. I think it would complement W. David Marx's book nicely, because Marx is so (understandably!) enthusiastic about his central thesis that he perhaps may have neglected some of the other large forces driving culture, and cultural change, and the cycles of culture he discusses.

If you like the essay, it overlaps a lot with Eno's excellent, longer and more detailed, Peel lecture, broadcast on the BBC in 2015, which you can listen to here:

https://www.openculture.com/2015/12/brian-enos-peel-lecture-on-art.html

Transcript here, if you prefer reading (you can skip the long introduction by Mark Radcliffe):

http://downloads.bbc.co.uk/6music/johnpeellecture/brian-eno-john-peel-lecture.pdf

Anyway, thanks again for the review, I'll go get the book. (But do check out the Eno essay; I suspect a dash of Eno's salt in Marx's soup could make for a remarkably nourishing meal – while also filling in some of the gaps in Marx's book which you worry about in your review.)

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