“Nouveau Riche” and “Ancien Pauvre”
Between the two, Jeeves preferes definitely. a third option
: The “Ancien Pauvre” which has remained a Gentleman. Even if the most comfortable
position is the one of “Ancien Riche”…
"Nouveau riche" is a term, usually derogatory, to
describe those whose wealth has been acquired within their own generation,
rather than by familial inheritance. The equivalent English term is the
"new rich" or "new money" (in contrast with "old
money"/"vieux riche").Sociologically, "nouveau riche"
refers to the man or woman who previously had belonged to a lower social class
and economic stratum (rank) within that class; and that the new money, which
constitutes his or her wealth, allowed upward social mobility and provided the
means for conspicuous consumption, the buying of goods and services that signal
membership in an upper class. As a pejorative term, "nouveau riche"
effects distinctions of type, the given stratum within a social class; hence,
among the rich people of a social class, "nouveau riche" describes
the vulgarity and ostentation of the new-rich man and woman who lack the
worldly experience and the system of values of old money, of inherited wealth,
such as the patriciate, the nobility and the gentry.
The idea of nouveau riche dates at least as far back as
ancient Greece (c. 8th century BC). In the 6th century BC, the poet and
aristocrat Theognis of Megara wrote how "in former days, there was a tribe
who knew no laws nor manners ... These men are nobles, now, the gentlemen of
old are now the trash". In the Roman Republic, the term "novus
homo" ("new man") carried similar connotations.
One can define social status in relation to wealth, and to
the power granted by the wealth. It has been argued[by whom?] that the upper,
ruling classes have legitimized "... their rule with claims of status and honor
and moral superiority". Ruling classes make claims in defense of the
ascribed superiority of wealth inherited through "blood ... and the
concept of proper breeding". The nouveau riche man and woman are
juxtaposed against the people of the old money social class; and with
trans-generational, inherited wealth, in order to highlight the cultural, value
system and societal differences, between the two social groups within the
class.
Old Family ties, as traditional claims of status, are not
found in the nouveaux riches, which challenges and ultimately redefines social
traditions and values such as the institution of debutantes and their debut to
society. As seen through the rise in the number of debutantes, the social value
of the debut has since shifted from the "family's elite social standing
and long family traditions" to "a symbolic value as an element of
upper-class life style". This transition allows for high social standing
to be established by the nouveau riche through the institution of the debut.
Social integration of these elite sects is extremely slow and sluggish, which
prolongs and strengthens stereotypes. This rate of integration makes it more
likely that the nouveaux riches will "retain identification with the
traditional ... group of origin; this is the basis for division between the
groups. Furthermore, the isolation that minority nouveaux riches experience
within their own class leads them "to prioritize issues of radical
justice, civil liberties, and religious tolerance over pure economic
self-interest".
Often referred to as parvenu, members of the nouveau riche
are often discriminated against by the "old money" sects of society
since they "lack the proper pedigree".[4] These newcomers to economic
power are subject to even greater scrutiny from their lack of historical prestige
as seen through Dye's comments which reference the new rich as
"uncouth" and "uncultured". The behavior of the nouveau
riche is often satirized by American society by "implying that
stereotyped, rather than real, behavior patterns are copied". Many people
have made claims to the inferiority of those with new money as compared to
those with old money. Many have made claims that nouveaux riches "lack
political and cultural sophistication" and others make comparisons saying
that the old rich are "more sophisticated than the less cosmopolitan
nouveau riche". These assumptions further perpetuate the differences
between the two and lead to even further stereotypes and have lasted for well
over a century. In the 1920s, Mrs. Jerome Napoleon Bonaparte, who herself
married into a family once considered parvenu and lacking in pedigree,
protested that "the nouveau riche... is making places like Palm Beach no
more exclusive than Coney Island. Newport, the last stronghold of the elite,
has the moneyed intruder at the gates.... Undesirables are penetrating
everywhere". In eighteenth century Europe "Old Money" families
attempted to raise themselves above the nouveau riches by sensitively
renovating their ancestral residences to allude to their antiquity. Their
evident ties to the families' history could not be rivaled by the new,
self-made, class. In the Dutch Republic the nobility sought this as an
advantage over the merchant burgers of Amsterdam and a similar trend arose in
the French Court. The same is true of the fashionable lairds of seventeenth
century Scotland who re-worked buildings like Thirlestane Castle, Glamis Castle
and Drumlanrig Castle to celebrate the lineage of their families.
The prejudice can be seen to express the differences between
the behaviour that keeps old money (caution, discretion) and that which gains
new wealth (aggression, chance-taking).
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