Snakes and Ladders by Professor Selina Todd - ISBN: 9781784703479
Paperback
Social mobility: myth or reality? Discover Britain’s hidden climb.

Snakes and Ladders

The great British social mobility myth

$36.80

  • Paperback

    448 pages

  • Release Date

    10 December 2022

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Summary

Politicians say social mobility is real – a just reward for ambition and hard work. This book proves otherwise.

“Intensely readable… A stimulating and necessary redress” - David Kynaston, Spectator

Politicians say social mobility is real… this book proves otherwise.

From servants’ children who became clerks in Victorian Britain, to managers made redundant by the 2008 financial crash, travelling up or down the social ladder has been a fact of British life for…

Book Details

ISBN-13:9781784703479
ISBN-10:1784703478
Author:Professor Selina Todd, Selina Todd
Publisher:Vintage Publishing
Imprint:Vintage
Format:Paperback
Number of Pages:448
Release Date:10 December 2022
Weight:381g
Dimensions:200mm x 130mm x 30mm
What They're Saying

Critics Review

A cogent history of social mobility in Britain … The kind of book where you underline almost every line

The great strength of Selina Todd’s Snakes and Ladders … is the richness of her presentation of it as a lived experience, whether upwards or downwards … intensely readable … a stimulating and necessary redress – David Kynaston * Spectator *In this fascinating, important book, Professor Selina Todd shows us that ‘levelling up’ has always been a far more chancy, even unrewarding, business than we like to think – Kathryn Hughes * Mail on Sunday *Structured around the personal stories of people who have experienced upward social mobility over the past 140 years or so … The social history that Todd deals with here is fascinating … The pandemic, as she argues, has reminded us that the jobs we reward are often not those that matter most. So instead of (or as well as) agonising about who gets to join the elite, we need to redefine the elite itself – David Aaronovich * The Times *Snakes and Ladders arrives at a moment of particular relevance … this pandemic is an opportunity to look at what is “essential” in work and to reward it appropriately. Society is only as mobile as its structures allow. And it would be no bad thing if affording status to all strata of society became more important than “getting ahead” – Andrew Anthony * Observer *Fascinating… [Snakes & Ladders is a] rich and well-observed historical account – David Willetts * Financial Times *A cogent history of social mobility in Britain … The kind of book where you underline almost every line – Caroline Sanderson * Bookseller Editor’s Choice *A brilliant, forcefully argued book that should be read by anyone wondering how we reached our current crisis point, and what we can do to level up – Huston Gilmore * UK Press Syndication *Snakes and Ladders is an enjoyable read and captures the essence of the different periods it covers. Selina Todd turns cold statistics into living histories with her very readable style – Lady Bryan of Partick * House Magazine *Todd takes a brisk journey through seven generations from the late 19th century to today’s millennials… Refreshingly, Todd is as concerned with the story of women’s efforts to ascend the social ladder as men’s - an important corrective to the classic cohort studies on social mobility… [Snakes and Ladders] is a trove of stories of human hope and disappointment – Melissa Benn * New Statesman *

About The Author

Professor Selina Todd

Selina Todd is Professor of Modern History at Oxford University. She grew up in Newcastle-upon-Tyne and was educated at Heaton Manor Comprehensive School and the Universities of Warwick and Sussex. She writes about class, inequality, working-class history, feminism and women’s lives in modern Britain. Her book The People - The Rise and Fall of the Working Class 1910-2010 was a Sunday Times bestseller and was described by the Observer as ‘A book we badly need’. Based on the voices of working-class people themselves, it charted the history of ordinary workers, housewives, children and pensioners over the turbulent twentieth century.

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