The Industrial Revolution is a central concept in conventional understandings of the modern world, and as such is a core topic on many history courses. It is therefore difficult for students to see it as anything other than an objective description of a crucial turning-point, yet a generation of social and labour history has revealed the inadequacies of the Industrial Revolution as a way of conceptualizing economic change. This book provides students with access to recent upheavals in scholarly debate by bringing a selection of previously published articles, by leading scholars and teachers, together in one volume, accompanied by explanatory notes. The editor's introduction also provides a synthesis and overview of the topic. As the revision of historical thought is a continual process, this volume seeks to bring the reinterpretation of such debates as working-class formation up to the present by introducing post-structuralist and feminist perspectives.
ISBN: | 9780415070539 |
Publication date: | 5th November 1992 |
Author: | Lenard R Berlanstein |
Publisher: | Routledge an imprint of Taylor & Francis |
Format: | Paperback |
Pagination: | 196 pages |
Series: | Rewriting Histories |
Genres: |
History and Archaeology European history Economic history |