384 Pages
    by Routledge

    380 Pages
    by Routledge

    Everyone who lived during the reign of Edward VII was an Edwardian, not merely the rich, the literary or the scandalous. In this classic work, Paul Thompson records the life stories of some five hundred Edwardians born between 1872 and 1906 in a pioneering use of oral history, which captures a unique record of their times. Domestics, labourers, skilled and semi-skilled workers, professionals and high society men and women describe their work, their families, their politics and their leisure. The Edwardians establishes and describes the most important dimensions of social change in the early twentieth century: class structure, gender distinctions, age distinctions - urban and rural - and regional differences. It also evaluates the forces for social change in the period: economic pressures, religious and political conviction, feminism and socialism, patriotism and the war, to reveal how near and how far Edwardian society was to revolution in this time of critical social change. By giving a voice to the contribution and experience of ordinary people, Paul Thompson brings the Edwardian era vividly to life. This new edition, is substantially revised and includes a new chapter on Identity and Power, to take into account major historiographical and social changes since its publication in 1975. It has new photographs and an up-to-date bibliography.

    INTRODUCTION Note on the interview method in social history; Part I Dimensions of inequality 1 MONEY 2 SUSTENANCE 3 COUNTRY AND TOWN 4 CHILDHOOD 5 YOUTH 6 MEN AND WOMEN: ADULTHOOD AND OLD AGE Part II Edwardians 7 UPPER AND MIDDLE CLASS Lady Violet Brandon; Grace Fulford; Sidney ford 8 THE BORDERLINE Peter Henry; Harriet Vincent 9 WORKING CLASS: THE SKILLED Frank Benson ; Gwen Davies; 10 WORKING CLASS: THE SEMI-SKILLED Fred Mills; Will Askham; Emmie Durham; 11 THE POOR Richard Morgan; Will Thorn Part III Instruments of change 12 THE ECONOMY 13 ESCAPE Social mobility and crime; Leisure and drink; Religion 14 IDENTITY AND POWER 15 SOLIDARITY 16 POLITICS 17 THE EDWARDIAN CRISIS Feminism The revolt of the upper classes and Ulster The labour unrest 18 WAR Part IV The outcome 19 THE STANDARD OF LIFE 20 FAMILY 21 CLASS 22 THEORY AND PRACTICE

    Biography

    Paul Thompson is Research Professor of Social History at the University of Essex and Director of the National Life Story Collection in London. A pioneer in oral history, he founded and co-edits the journal, Oral History, and is founder of the Oral History Society. His other works include: The Voice of the Past, The Work of William Morris and The Myths We Live By.

    `An ambitious and exciting enterprise.' - Times Literary Supplement

    `Must be regarded as an important step in rescuing Edwardian history from what he rightly calls "an academic limbo" ... combines the qualities of readability, breadth of focus, willingness to explain.' - Times Educational Supplement

    `Quite the most readable and illuminating piece of historical sociology to have been published in a long time.' - The Observer