"Power is not of a man. Wealth does not center in the person of the wealthy. Celebrity is not inherent in any personality. To be celebrated, to be wealthy, to have power requires access to major institutions"
About this Quote
The intent is diagnostic, almost deflationary. Mills is warning that if you keep looking for the secret of influence inside individual biographies, you’ll miss the machinery that manufactures influence in the first place: corporations, political parties, the military, major media, elite universities, foundations. “Access” is the operative word, and it’s doing quiet work. It implies gates, gatekeepers, credentials, networks, and the ability to be repeatedly platformed. It also hints at how fragile these supposedly personal attributes are. Remove institutional backing and “power” evaporates; fame becomes a local anecdote.
Context matters: Mills wrote in the mid-century United States, when bureaucracies were swelling, mass media was consolidating, and the “power elite” were increasingly interlocked across boardrooms, government, and defense. The subtext is political: blaming or praising individuals is emotionally satisfying, but it lets institutions off the hook. If outcomes are institutional, then accountability has to be institutional too. Mills doesn’t just demystify success; he points to where pressure, reform, and democratic control would actually need to land.
Quote Details
| Topic | Justice |
|---|---|
| Source | Verified source: The Power Elite (C. Wright Mills, 1956)
Evidence: power is not of a man. Wealth does not center in the person of the wealthy. Celebrity is not inherent in any personality. To be celebrated, to be wealthy, to have power requires access to major institutions, for the institutional positions men occupy determine in large part their chances to have and to hold these valued experiences. (Chapter 1 (“The Higher Circles”), p. 11). This passage appears in the opening chapter of Mills’s book, as part of a thought experiment that begins, “If we took the one hundred most powerful men in America, the one hundred wealthiest, and the one hundred most celebrated away from the institutional positions they now occupy…”. The quote you supplied matches this section, but many secondary quote sites truncate it and omit the following clause (“for the institutional positions men occupy…”). Based on this evidence, the earliest identifiable primary publication is the first edition of The Power Elite (1956). Other candidates (1) The Inequality Reader (David Grusky, 2018) compilation99.6% ... power is not of a man . Wealth does not center in the person of the wealthy . Celebrity is not inherent in any pe... |
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Citation Formats
APA Style (7th ed.)
Mills, C. Wright. (2026, February 8). Power is not of a man. Wealth does not center in the person of the wealthy. Celebrity is not inherent in any personality. To be celebrated, to be wealthy, to have power requires access to major institutions. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/power-is-not-of-a-man-wealth-does-not-center-in-75635/
Chicago Style
Mills, C. Wright. "Power is not of a man. Wealth does not center in the person of the wealthy. Celebrity is not inherent in any personality. To be celebrated, to be wealthy, to have power requires access to major institutions." FixQuotes. February 8, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/power-is-not-of-a-man-wealth-does-not-center-in-75635/.
MLA Style (9th ed.)
"Power is not of a man. Wealth does not center in the person of the wealthy. Celebrity is not inherent in any personality. To be celebrated, to be wealthy, to have power requires access to major institutions." FixQuotes, 8 Feb. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/power-is-not-of-a-man-wealth-does-not-center-in-75635/. Accessed 25 Feb. 2026.








