Family Structure in the Staffordshire Potteries 1840-1880
Summary
The feel-good place to buy books

Family Structure in the Staffordshire Potteries 1840-1880 by Marguerite W Dupree
This study breaks new ground in its analysis of how people both create and adapt to the process of industrialization. It offers a substantial scholarly case-study of the Potteries, which both complements and in some respects challenges studies of family structure in other areas during the nineteenth century. Marguerite Dupree focuses on family relationships - between husbands and wives, parents and children, individuals and their wider kin network - not in isolation, but in the context of the workplace and of other institutions within the community. She reveals the flexibility of nuclear families with regard to both work and welfare, and highlights the key role of women in shaping the responses of families to their circumstances. Her approach effectively combines demography with social history to offer many valuable insights into industrialization and its impact on family life.
By focusing upon the community and examining issues of welfare, family life, and gender as well as work and employer-employee relationshipsDupree makes a series of stimulating and persuasive contributions to understanding the nineteenth century.
a significant contribution to the ongoing analysis of the impact of the Industrial Revolution on society in 19th-century Britain...belongs in extensive British history holdings as an example of good social history. * Choice 33:4 *
This study makes a substantial and significant contribution to the understanding of the nature and form of family relationships within industrial communities of the mid-nineteenth century ... Of particular value is the emphasis given to "locality" and the recognition that the processes of socio-demographic change were played out in very different contexts in mid-nineteenth century Britain. * Business History *
By focussing upon the community and examining issues of welfare, family life and gender as well as work and employee relationships Dupree makes a series of stimulating and persuasive contributions to understanding the nineteenth century.
This strategy of analysis is invaluable. Exact comparison of a broad range of family statistics is rare in historical community studies, but it is essential if we want to understand how local conditions influence family structure ... the book has much to offer ... For specialists in the Victorian family or those with a particular interest in the potteries, the book is essential reading. * Steven Ruggles, University of Minnesota, American Journal of Sociology *
a significant contribution to the ongoing analysis of the impact of the Industrial Revolution on society in 19th-century Britain...belongs in extensive British history holdings as an example of good social history. * Choice 33:4 *
This study makes a substantial and significant contribution to the understanding of the nature and form of family relationships within industrial communities of the mid-nineteenth century ... Of particular value is the emphasis given to "locality" and the recognition that the processes of socio-demographic change were played out in very different contexts in mid-nineteenth century Britain. * Business History *
By focussing upon the community and examining issues of welfare, family life and gender as well as work and employee relationships Dupree makes a series of stimulating and persuasive contributions to understanding the nineteenth century.
This strategy of analysis is invaluable. Exact comparison of a broad range of family statistics is rare in historical community studies, but it is essential if we want to understand how local conditions influence family structure ... the book has much to offer ... For specialists in the Victorian family or those with a particular interest in the potteries, the book is essential reading. * Steven Ruggles, University of Minnesota, American Journal of Sociology *
Anne Marie Rafferty CBE is Professor of Nursing Policy at King's College London and President of the Royal College of Nursing Marguerite Dupree is Professor Emeritus of Social and Medical History at the University of Glasgow and Emeritus Fellow of Wolfson College at the University of Cambridge Fay Bound Alberti is Reader in History, a UKRI Future Leaders Fellow and Co-Director of the Centre for Global Health Histories at the University of York
| SKU | Unavailable |
| ISBN 13 | 9780198204008 |
| ISBN 10 | 0198204000 |
| Title | Family Structure in the Staffordshire Potteries 1840-1880 |
| Author | Marguerite W Dupree |
| Series | Oxford Historical Monographs |
| Condition | Unavailable |
| Binding Type | Hardback |
| Publisher | Oxford University Press |
| Year published | 1995-03-23 |
| Number of pages | 426 |
| Cover note | Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary. |
| Note | Unavailable |