000 01498cam a2200277 4500
001 0000005121
005 20150716090939.0
008 011109s xx 000 0 eng
022 _a1522-3191;
050 0 _aAC1.S5
082 0 _a050
100 1 _aAldrich Jr./nelson W.
245 1 4 _aThe Country Club Bubble. /
_cNelson W. Aldrich Jr..
260 _bWorth,
_c2001.
440 0 _aSIRS Enduring Issues 2002.
_nArticle 30.
_pBusiness,
_x1522-3191;
500 _aArticles Contained in SIRS Enduring Issues 2002.
500 _aOriginally Published: The Country Club Bubble, June 2001; pp. 98+.
520 _a"Great American novels and short stories, especially of the 1920s, couldn't have been written without a country club to bring out the anguish of classism. From Dreiser and Fitzgerald to Marquand and O'Hara, grill rooms and locker rooms appear as citadels of America's aristocracy of inherited wealth. They were the places you couldn't get in, not because you didn't have the money...but merely because you had the wrong DNA. Country clubs aroused the most painful sort of envy." (WORTH) This article explores the exclusivity of country clubs as a microcosm of the effects of wealth.
599 _aRecords created from non-MARC resource.
650 0 _aCountry clubs.
650 0 _aRich people.
650 0 _aSocial status.
650 0 _aWealth
_xMoral and ethical aspects.
710 2 _aSIRS Publishing, Inc.
_tSIRS Enduring Issues 2002.
_pBusiness.,
_x1522-3191.
942 _c UKN
999 _c33135
_d33135