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Sci-fi books with class struggle

Class struggle is one of science fiction's oldest and most enduring themes — the divide between the powerful and the dispossessed, dramatized through corporate dystopias, stratified colonies, and futures where technology has honed inequality to a blade's edge. From the underclass toiling beneath a gleaming arcology to laborers worked to exhaustion on a distant mining world, the genre uses speculative settings to lay bare the mechanics of exploitation, and the resistance it eventually provokes.

Content here may include depictions of poverty, exploitation, and the violence — structural or open — that enforces a hierarchy. The framing is often pointedly political, sympathizing with those at the bottom and indicting the systems above them, though the tone ranges from righteous anger to weary realism. Related tags such as oppression, poverty, dehumanization, and rebellion add specificity about which aspects a given book emphasizes. Science fiction's scale lets it push these dynamics to extremes that sharpen the point: a society literally stratified by altitude or orbit, an underclass engineered for labor, a future where the wealthy can buy longer lives while the poor cannot. Some books use these images for sharp satire, others for sober tragedy, and the emotional weight follows accordingly. The violence in class-struggle stories is often structural — poverty, neglect, slow harm imposed by a system — rather than dramatic, which some readers find more disturbing precisely because it feels closer to home. Reviews and related tags help indicate how directly a given title confronts that material.

On this shelf, expect inequality treated as a central subject rather than incidental background — the engine of the story rather than its set dressing. If you'd like a sense of how grim or how hopeful a particular title's treatment runs, the related warnings and a book's reviews are the best guide. The tag is here to orient readers toward the stories about power and class they're looking for, or away from ones they'd rather skip.

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