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Poverty Amidst Prosperity Carl Chinn

Poverty Amidst Prosperity von Carl Chinn

Poverty Amidst Prosperity Carl Chinn


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Zusammenfassung

Focusing on the urban poor, this book explains their way of life. Using working-class autobiographies and other evidence from working-class people themselves, it shows how people reacted to poverty, and brings to the fore their strategies for coping with their situation. It provides an introduction to those seeking to understand poverty.

Poverty Amidst Prosperity Zusammenfassung

Poverty Amidst Prosperity: The Urban Poor in England, 1834-1914 Carl Chinn

The upper and middle classes of Victorian England were marked out by their confidence: they boasted that the sun never set on their Empire; they believed they were destined to lead other nations; and they bragged that their civilisation was pre-eminent. Their self-belief was assured because they lived in a country that had become rich through industrialisation. But amidst great prosperity there was also much poverty. Deprivation and distress were widespread and obvious. In towns and cities, grand public and civic buildings were surrounded by poor dwellings later known as 'slums'. The poor crowded into these insanitary districts; they rented badly built dwellings with inadequate facilities; they did the dirtiest, hardest and most dangerous jobs; they ate the worst food; they suffered ill health and early deaths. Poverty blighted their lives. Many observers asserted that many of the poor were thriftless and feckless. They stated that the muckiness of the poor districts was caused by dirty people who did not wish to raise themselves out of the mire. Gradually, however, social investigators began to question these scathing generalisations, arguing that poverty was usually the result of economic conditions over which individuals and families had no control. Poverty Amidst Prosperity focuses on the urban poor themselves, and explains their way of life from within. Using working-class autobiographies and other evidence from working-class people themselves, Carl Chinn shows how people reacted to poverty, and brings to the fore their strategies for coping with their situation. He asserts that the urban poor were not passive victims of their circumstances, but that they fought against poverty with the support of neighbours and kin, and that they formed thriving villages in a dreadful urban environment. This book provides the ideal introduction to those seeking to understand poverty from the grassroots. Its wide range of evidence, clear analysis and strong argument stress the importance of communities, and give a voice to those whom traditional history has marginalised.

Über Carl Chinn

Carl Chinn MBE is Professor of Community History at the University of Birmingham

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Preface to the new edition and acknowledgements ix Introduction: what is poverty? 1 1 The extent of poverty 9 Two nations 9 The investigation of urban poverty 15 Poverty and class 19 Poverty lines 23 2 The causes of poverty 31 Poverty: personal failings or economic forces? 31 Poverty and the unskilled 36 Poverty and the skilled 41 Poverty and people with disabilities 46 Poverty and age 48 Poverty and gender 50 Poverty and ethnicity 55 3 The environment of poverty 61 Poverty and housing 61 Poverty and health 73 4 Reactions to poverty 81 Poverty: punishment and philanthropy 81 Poverty: physical inefficiency and social reform 89 Poverty and the residuum 94 5 Living in poverty 98 The abyss 98 Neighbourhoods 101 Conclusion 117 Selected documents 119 Notes and references 139 Bibliographical essay 155 Index 157

Zusätzliche Informationen

GOR011298866
9781859361269
1859361269
Poverty Amidst Prosperity: The Urban Poor in England, 1834-1914 Carl Chinn
Gebraucht - Wie Neu
Broschiert
Carnegie Publishing Ltd
20070510
176
N/A
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