
No one remembers happy lovers. “Happily ever after” simply means stirring the oatmeal and doing the laundry, and that sort of scenario is uninteresting. Romeo and Juliet,
Casablanca’s Rick and Ilsa, Antony and Cleopatra, Lancelot and Guinevere, all are famous lovers whose stories end tragically. James Cameron’s
Titanic is the biggest grossing film of all time—and it’s not because it’s just another disaster film. Without the tragic love story, and the obstacle of the class barrier that in large part creates it, you have another
Poseidon Adventure. As Lysander observes in Shakespeare’s
A Midsummer Night’s Dream, “Ay me! For aught that I could ever read,/Could ever hear by tale or history,/The course of true love never did run smooth.” The greatest obstacle to love is death, but one of the most prevalent obstacles is that of class—even in America, where we’re not supposed to care about such things.
Songs About The Class Barrier:Phil Collins –
Like ChinaBilly Joel –
Only the Good Die YoungDickey Lee –
PatchesGene Pitney –
Princess In RagsJohnny Rivers –
The Poor Side of TownSonny & Cher –
Baby Don’t GoGeorge Strait –
Does Fort Worth Ever Cross Your MindConway Twitty –
Tight Fightin’ JeansThe 4 Seasons –
Rag DollThe 4 Seasons –
Dawn (Go Away)Charlie Walker –
Pick Me Up On Your Way DownHank Williams, Jr. –
This Ain’t DallasMark Wills –
Jacob’s LadderFaron Young –
Country GirlRequired Reading:Roland Barthes,
A Lover’s DiscourseDenis de Rougemont,
Love in the Western World
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