The Middlemost and the Milltowns

The Middlemost and the Milltowns

Author: Brian Lewis

Publisher: Stanford University Press

Published: 2002-11-01

Total Pages: 592

ISBN-13: 0804780269

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

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.


So clean

So clean

Author: Brian Lewis

Publisher: Manchester University Press

Published: 2017-10-03

Total Pages: 257

ISBN-13: 1526130432

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

This book is an unorthodox biography of William Hesketh Lever, 1st Lord Leverhulme (1851-1925), the founder of the Lever Brothers’ Sunlight Soap empire. Unlike previous biographies, which have focused on the man’s life story and eccentricities, or just considered one aspect of his career, So clean places him squarely in his social and cultural context and is fully informed by recent historical scholarship. Much more than a warts-and-all biography, the book uses Lever as an entry-point for contextualized and comparative essays on the history of advertising; on factory paternalism, town planning, the Garden City movement and their ramifications across the twentieth century; and on colonialism and forced labour in the Belgian Congo and the South Pacific. It concludes with a discussion of his extraordinary attempt, in his final years, to transform crofting and fishing in the Outer Hebrides. Written in an engaging and accessible style, So Clean will appeal to academics and students working in business, social, cultural and imperial history.


Fossil Capital

Fossil Capital

Author: Andreas Malm

Publisher: Verso Books

Published: 2016-02-23

Total Pages: 694

ISBN-13: 1784781304

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

A sweeping study of how capitalism first promoted fossil fuels with the rise of steam power—and contributed to the worsening climate crisis The more we know about the catastrophic implications of climate change, the more fossil fuels we burn. How did we end up in this mess? In this masterful new history, Andreas Malm claims it all began in Britain with the rise of steam power. But why did manufacturers turn from traditional sources of power, notably water mills, to an engine fired by coal? Contrary to established views, steam offered neither cheaper nor more abundant energy—but rather superior control of subordinate labor. Animated by fossil fuels, capital could concentrate production at the most profitable sites and during the most convenient hours, as it continues to do today. Sweeping from nineteenth-century Manchester to the emissions explosion in China, from the original triumph of coal to the stalled shift to renewables, this study hones in on the burning heart of capital and demonstrates, in unprecedented depth, that turning down the heat will mean a radical overthrow of the current economic order. “The definitive deep history on how our economic system created the climate crisis. Superb, essential reading from one of the most original thinkers on the subject.” —Naomi Klein, author of This Changes Everything and The Shock Doctrine


Thomas Carlyle

Thomas Carlyle

Author: John Morrow

Publisher: A&C Black

Published: 2007-03-10

Total Pages: 332

ISBN-13: 9781852855444

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

The new and authoritative account of a key Victorian figure - now in paperback format.


Uniting in Measures of Common Good

Uniting in Measures of Common Good

Author: Darren Ferry

Publisher: McGill-Queen's Press - MQUP

Published: 2008

Total Pages: 444

ISBN-13: 0773574670

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Ferry examines a wide selection of voluntary societies - mechanics' institutes, mutual benefit organizations, agricultural associations, temperance societies, and literary and scientific associations. He reinterprets the history of these organizations in terms of their own internal tensions over liberal doctrines and the effect of social, cultural, and economic change and compares the effects of liberalism on rural and urban associations and on societies in both English and French Canada.


A Sixpence at Whist

A Sixpence at Whist

Author: Janet E. Mullin

Publisher: Boydell & Brewer

Published: 2015

Total Pages: 242

ISBN-13: 1783270470

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Peering through the windows of private homes and Assembly Rooms alike, this book shines a new light on the middle classes during the long eighteenth century.


A Mad, Bad, and Dangerous People?

A Mad, Bad, and Dangerous People?

Author: Boyd Hilton

Publisher: Oxford University Press

Published: 2008-06-19

Total Pages: 784

ISBN-13: 0199218919

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

In a period scarred by apprehensions of revolution, war, invasion, poverty and disease, elite members of society lived in fear of revolt. Boyd Hilton examines the changes in society between 1783-1846 and the transformations from raffish and rakish behaviour to the new norms of Victorian respectability.


Crown, Church and Constitution

Crown, Church and Constitution

Author: Jörg Neuheiser

Publisher: Berghahn Books

Published: 2016-05

Total Pages: 318

ISBN-13: 178533140X

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Much scholarship on nineteenth-century English workers has been devoted to the radical reform politics that powerfully unsettled the social order in the century’s first decades. Comparatively neglected have been the impetuous patriotism, royalism, and xenophobic anti-Catholicism that countless men and women demonstrated in the early Victorian period. This much-needed study of the era’s “conservatism from below” explores the role of religion in everyday culture and the Tories’ successful mobilization across class boundaries. Long before they were able to vote, large swathes of the lower classes embraced Britain’s monarchical, religious, and legal institutions in the defense of traditional English culture.


The Magical Imagination

The Magical Imagination

Author: Karl Bell

Publisher: Cambridge University Press

Published: 2012-02-23

Total Pages: 309

ISBN-13: 1107002001

DOWNLOAD EBOOK

Innovative history of the popular magical imagination and ordinary people's experience of urbanization in nineteenth-century England.