How did rescue dogs become status symbols? Why are luxury brands losing their cachet? Whatâs made F. Scott Fitzgeraldâs most famous observations obsolete? The answers are part of a new revolution thatâs radically reorganizing the way we view ourselves and others that âwill be hard for pop-culture readers to put downâ (Booklist).
Status was once easy to identifyâfast cars, fancy shoes, sprawling estates, elite brands. But in place of Louboutinâs and Lamborghinis, the relevance of the rich, famous, and gauche is waning and a riveting revolution is underfoot.
Chuck Thompsonâdubbed âsavagely funnyâ by The New York Times and âwickedly entertainingâ by the San Francisco Chronicleâsets out to determine what âstatusâ means today and learns that what was once considered the low life has become the high life. In Status Revolution, Thompson tours the new world of status from a small community in British Columbia where an indigenous artist uses wood carving to restore communal status; to a Washington, DC, meeting of the âPatriotic Millionaires,â a club of high-earners who are begging the government to tax them; to a luxury auto factory in the south of Italy where making beautiful cars is as much about bringing dignity to a low-earning region than it is about flash and indulgence; to a London lab where the neural secrets of status are being unlocked.
âChock-full of shocking revelationsâ (In Touch Weekly) and with his signature wit and irreverence, Thompson explains why everything we know about status is changing, upends centuries of conventional wisdom, and shows how the new status revolution reflects our place in contemporary society.