Difference Between Class
Difference Between Class
Difference Between Class
In Max Webers phraseology, caste and class are both status groups. While castes are
perceived as hereditary groups with a fixed ritual status, social classes are defined in terms of
the relations of production. A social class is a category of people who have a similar socioeconomic status in relation to other classes in the society. The individuals and families which
are classified as part of the same social class have similar life chances, prestige, style of life,
attitudes etc.
In the caste system, status of a caste is determined not by the economic and the political
privileges but by the ritualistic legitimation of authority. In the class system, ritual norms
have no importance at all but power and wealth alone determine ones status (Dumont, 1958).
Class system differs in many respects from other forms of stratificationslavery, estate and
caste system. In earlier textbooks such as written by Maclver, Davis and Bottomore, it was
observed that caste and class are polar opposites. They are antithetical to each other. While
class represents a democratic society having equality of opportunity, caste is obverse of
it.
Following are the main differences between class and caste systems:
1. Castes are found in Indian sub-continent only, especially in India, while classes are found
almost everywhere. Classes are especially the characteristic of industrial societies of Europe
and America. According to Dumont and Leach, caste is a unique phenomenon found only in
India.
2. Classes depend mainly on economic differences between groupings of individuals
inequalities in possession and control of material resourceswhereas in caste system noneconomic factors such as influence of religion [theory of karma, rebirth and ritual (puritypollution)] are most important.
3. Unlike castes or other types of strata, classes are not established by legal or religious
provisions; membership is not based on inherited position as specified either legally or by
custom. On the other hand, the membership is inherited in the caste system.
4. Class system is typically more fluid than the caste system or the other types of
stratification and the boundaries between classes are never clear-cut. Caste system is static
whereas the class system is dynamic.
5. In the class system, there are no formal restrictions on inter-dining and inter-marriage
between people from different classes as is found in the caste system. Endogamy is the
essence of caste system which is perpetuating it.
6. Social classes are based on the principle of achievement, i.e., on ones own efforts, not
simply given at birth as is common in the caste system and other types of stratification
system. As such social mobility (movement upwards and downwards) is much more common
in the class structure than in the caste system or in other types. In the caste system, individual
mobility from one caste to another is impossible.
This is why, castes are known as closed classes (D.N. Majumdar). It is a closed system of
stratification in which almost all sons end up in precisely the same stratum their fathers
occupied. The system of stratification in which there is high rate of upward mobility, such as
that in the Britain and United States is known as open class system. The view that castes are
closed classes is not accepted by M.N. Srinivas (1962) and Andre Beteille (1965).
7. In the caste system and in other types of stratification system, inequalities are expressed
primarily in personal relationships of duty or obligationbetween lower- and higher-caste
individuals, between serf and lord, between slave and master. On the other hand, the nature of
class system is impersonal. Class system operates mainly through large-scale connections of
an impersonal kind.
8. Caste system is characterized by cumulative inequality but class system is characterized
by dispersed inequality.
9. Caste system is an organic system but class has a seminary character where various
segments are motivated by competition (Leach, 1960).
10. Caste works as an active political force in a village (Beteille, 1966) but class does not
work so.
Caste
Class
Membership of a cast is
hereditary and no amount or
struggle and change it.
10
11