Idea of the City in Nineteenth-Century Britain

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Abject Poor
alton
Barren
beast
Bitter Cry
Broadway House
Business Enterprise
Category=JBSD
Central Government
cities
City's Labour Force
Commercial Enterprise
Edwardian Period
English Towns
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Finsbury Square
Fro Generation
great
Human Suffering
Legislative Interference
life
locke
modern
nineteenth-century Britain
Park Street
Public Health Movement
public-health reformers
relative optimism
Rich Goods
robert
Rural Society
Sanitary Reform
Social Organization
Social Problem Novels
southey
Tea Pot
Town Hall
urbanization
Victorian Britain
wild
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415417891
  • Weight: 420g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 21 Dec 2006
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In nineteenth-century Britain, ahead of the rest of the world in economic development, many towns and cities grew to a size that only London had attained before. This volume focuses on the intellectual and controversial response of the period's leading men and women to the key issues of urbanization and its surrounding social problems.

The extracts selected date from 1785 to 1909, and are drawn from the writings, reports and speeches of admirers of city life and its most passionate critics, optimists and alarmists, advocates of back-to-the-land panaceas, and reformers who aspired to control and reform cities. Contemporaries quoted include Dickens, Cobbett, Carlyle, Disraeli, Engels, Mrs Gaskell, Ruskin, Joseph Chamberlain, William Morris, Charles Booth, H.G. Wells and Seebohm Rowntree. In a valuable introduction the editor indicates the main preoccupations of the debate abotu the city, proposes a periodization for it, adn shows its connections with other controversies and issues, as Victorian Britain found itself entering an 'age of great cities'.

This book was first published in 1973.