Making Sense of the Industrial Revolution: English Economy and Society, 17001850
By (Author) Steve King
By (author) Geoff Timmins
Manchester University Press
Manchester University Press
26th April 2001
United Kingdom
Paperback
416
Width 138mm, Height 216mm
By using many real case studies, including the experiences of individuals as well as extracts from contemporary documents, this book aims to capture the reality of industrialization while introducing the many facts and figures which make up the real backbone of the history of the period. The study opens with a complete summary of the many debates in the literature on this period. It then makes a case for re-introducing a regional approach to the history of the age. It goes on to look at the development of the economic structures, which include chapters on financing the revolution, technological change, markets and demand, transport and food. The final section looks at economic change and its impact, which includes chapters on demography, the household, families, authority and regulation, and the built environment.
"The authors deliver on the promise they make in their title...a good resource for any scholar...."--Lindy Biggs, "Technology and Culture"
Steven King is Lecturer in History at Oxford Brookes University Geoffrey Timmins is Principal Lecturer in History at the University of Central Lancashire