The Middlemost and the Milltowns: Bourgeois Culture and Politics in Early Industrial England

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Stanford University Press, 2002 M11 1 - 592 páginas
This book seeks to enrich our understanding of middle-class life in England during the Industrial Revolution. For many years, questions about how the middle classes earned (and failed to earn) money, conducted their public and private lives, carried out what they took to be their civic and religious duties, and viewed themselves in relation to the rest of society have been largely neglected questions. These topics have been marginalized by the rise of social history, with its predominant focus on the political formation of the working classes, and by continuing interest in government and high politics, with its focus on the upper classes and landed aristocracy.

This book forms part of the recent attempt, influenced by contemporary ideas of political culture, to reassess the role, composition, and outlook of the middle classes. It compares and contrasts three Lancashire milltowns and surrounding parishes in the early phase of textile industrialization when the urbanizing process was at its most rapid and dysfunctional, and class relations were most fraught. The book s range extends from the French Revolution to 1851, the year of the Great Exhibition, which symbolized mid-century stability and prosperity.

The author argues that members of the middle class were pivotal in the creation of this stability. He shows them creating themselves as a class while being created as a class, putting themselves in order while being ordered from above. The book shifts attention from the search for a single elusive class consciousness to demonstrate instead how the ideological leaders of the three milltowns negotiated their power within the powerful forces of capitalism and state-building. It argues that, at a time of intense labor-capital conflict, it was precisely because of their diversity, and their efforts to build bridges to the lower orders and upper class, that the stability of the liberal-capitalist system was maintained.

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Contenido

Introduction
1
Wartime
15
Seriousness
37
Containment
69
Domesticity Sex and Marriage
94
Policing and Punishment
126
The Peace of God
151
Regulating Poverty
221
Dealing with Labor
287
Ordering the Town
312
Bourgeois Time and Space
346
Peacetime
371
Conclusion
402
Appendixes
407
Notes
431
Index
557

Voluntary Associations
248

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Acerca del autor (2002)

Brian Lewis is Associate Professor of History at McGill University.

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