Michael Kraus, University of California, San Francisco
Tuesday, April 17, 2012 at 7 p.m.
Smith Recital Hall, Silver Center for the Arts
Social class permeates social life, shaping everything from where people live to the food they eat and the music they listen to. And yet research typically emphasizes the pathology of the lower class: the psychological and physiological shortcomings lower-class individuals experience due to their reduced status in society. In his talk, Michael Kraus advocates for an alternative cultural perspective on social class, suggesting that the contexts of lower- and upper-class individuals—characterized by disparities in material resources and socioeconomic rank—create reliable and sometimes surprising differences in prosocial tendencies, such as empathy and generosity, among lower- and upper-class individuals.
Michael Kraus is a postdoctoral scholar at the University of California, San Francisco. His research focuses on how status is signaled and expressed in interactions, how teams promote cooperation, and how close relationships shape the self-concept.












