Parish-Fed Bastards: A History of the Politics of the Unemployed in Britain, 1884-1939
By (Author) Richard Flanagan
Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
Praeger Publishers Inc
16th October 1991
United States
Tertiary Education
Non Fiction
Poverty and precarity
Pressure groups, protest movements and non-violent action
322.20941
Hardback
304
Width 156mm, Height 235mm
652g
This work offers a study highlighting the active political nature of the unemployed rather than one of passive victims of the system whose existence signals economic decline and social injustice. Starting in 1884, the efforts of the unemployed to unite together are traced up to the formation of the National Unemployment Workers' Movement in 1939. The author aims to lift the literature on the history of the unemployed out of what he considers a largely fictionalized view and into a historically relevant account. He examines how the unemployed related to their society and how they were able to overcome their diversity at times of crisis to form a single political voice and gain some control over their lives. The study draws conclusions about the relationship between unemployment and any industrialized society, about the viability of certain solutions to the conflicts between classes and, most importantly, about the political influence that even the most disadvantaged can exert if encouraged to take an active role in their future.
There is nothing detached or uncommitted about Richard Flanagan's study. It sets out to reject current analyses, which stress the political passivity of the unemployed and portray them as helpless victims, incapable of affecting their destiny.-American Journal of Sociology
"There is nothing detached or uncommitted about Richard Flanagan's study. It sets out to reject current analyses, which stress the political passivity of the unemployed and portray them as helpless victims, incapable of affecting their destiny."-American Journal of Sociology
RICHARD FLANAGAN holds a Master of Letters from Oxford University and presently lives in Hobart, Tasmania, Australia.