1st Edition

The Erosion of Childhood Childhood in Britain 1860-1918

By Lionel Rose Copyright 1991
    304 Pages
    by Routledge

    302 Pages
    by Routledge

    Discusses the status of children in society from the mid-Victorian period to the end of the First World War, showing that children were regarded principally as objects to be used and abused rather than people in their own right.

    Publisher’s note, 1. Children without childhood: an introduction, 2. Factories and mines legislation, 3. Sweatshops, cottage labour and moonlighting up to the First World War, 4. Children on the land and children at sea, 5. Young slaves—children in domestic service, 6. Brickyard and canal boat children and chimney sweeps, 7. Theatrical, circus and fairground children, 8. Juvenile street traders, 9. Waifs and beggars, 10. Vagrancy, 11. The blind-alley job problem, 12. Employers, education and the part-time system, 13. School curriculum codes and the ‘Standards’ 1862–1918, 14. Teaching methods 1860–1918, 15. Health and schooling, 16. Schooling and the upper classes, 17. Pupil society and school discipline, 18. School attendance, 19. The formative results of education, 20. Education and economic mobility, 21. Exploitation, discipline and duty in the working-class home, 22. Upbringing in the upper-class home, 23. The child protection movement, Conclusion, Notes, Bibliography, Index

    Biography

    Lionel Rose

    `It is almost impossible to overpraise this book, which must stand as the classic study of the subject for a long time. ... rivetingly readable.' - Times Education Supplement