Marc P
Tuesday 28th June 2011 11:00am [Edited]
17,698 posts
Somebody who has social aspirations in a sitcom is always doomed to have those social aspirations limited. It is comment on a period of change, as in Steptoe and later on in Only Fools with a second wave of embourgeoisement if you like with the boom of the 80s and the rise of the Yuppie. Likewise with the earlier Citizen Smith when the old school of the militant left was being parodied as the norms shifted. The growing middle class, the shrinking old notion of working class... and the rich still getting richer I guess.
Quote: Timbo @ June 28 2011, 11:56 AM BST
Marc, I do not disagree, but this means that these sitcoms are "all about the middle class"; as you say characters such as Rigsby, Bob Ferris, Del Boy, Harold Steptoe, Mildred Roper, Rita Garnett, Foggy Dewhurst and Antony Aloysius aspire in their different ways to better themselves but are unable to escape their roots - but this has always been a staple of literary and dramatic portrayals of working class life. And these sitcoms of working class social aspiration are also often as much about the defiantly working class character: Albert Steptoe, Alf Garnett, Terry Collier, Compo Simmonite, George Roper. The aspirations of the character who wishes to escape tells us far more about the world he wishes to escape from than it does the world he wishes to enter.
Basil Fawlty or Captain Mainwaring are already middle class but their aspirations for increased social cachet do not mean that these sitcoms are about the upper class.
And of course there also sitcoms characters unable to cope with or unwilling to conform with middle class life: Reggie Perrin, Tom Good, Victor Meldrew, Shelley.
The Royle Family is perhaps an example of a working class sitcom not based upon aspiration, and I am not sure Porridge fits the class paradigm at all.
All true. But Basil and Mainwaring don't aspire to be upper class. They know their place - they are frustrated because other people don't know theirs.
Porridge is interesting. It's to do with the criminal class I suspect, rather than working and Fletcher tries to help his young protege not fall into the cycle of offending that he has. Trying to make him make something better of himself. But not necessarily in a class sense.