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    Annals of the Labouring Poor: Social Change and Agrarian England, 1660-1900

    £45.90
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    ISBN: 9780521335584
    Products specifications
    Attribute nameAttribute value
    AuthorSNELL
    Pub Date02/04/1987
    BindingPaperback
    Pages476
    Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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    This collection of essays is concerned with the impact of social and economic change upon the rural labouring poor and artisans in England, and combines an understanding of their social priorities with quantitative analysis. A significant resource is the use of settlement records.

    This collection of inter-connected essays is concerned with the impact of social and economic change upon the rural labouring poor and artisans in England, and combines a sensitive understanding of their social priorities with innovative quantitative analysis. It is based on an impressive range of sources, and its particular significance arises from the pioneering use made of a largely neglected archival source - settlement records - to address questions of central importance in English social and economic history in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. Levels of employment, wage rates, poor relief, the sexual division of labour, the social consequences of enclosure, the decline of farm service and traditional apprenticeship, and th equality of family life are amongst the issues discussed in a profound re-assessment of a perennial problem: the standard of living (in its widest sense) of the labouring poor during the period of industrialisation.
    The author's conclusions challenge much of the prevailing orthodoxy, and his extensive use of literary and attitudinal material is closely integrated with the quantitative restatement of an interpretation that owes much to the older tradition of the Hammonds' Village Labourer.