INTERPRETATIONS OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IN BRITAINS SEMINAR SCHEDULE AND BIBLIOGRAPHY Dr. Gerard M. Koot, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth

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INTERPRETATIONS OF THE INDUSTRIAL REVOLUTION IN BRITAINS SEMINAR SCHEDULE AND BIBLIOGRAPHY Dr. Gerard M. Koot, University of Massachusetts Dartmouth I WEEK of June 27 Sunday Evening, June 27: London Welcome Reception and Dinner, 6 PM. Monday: Seminar Introduction and Logistics Kenneth Morgan, The Birth of Industrial Britain: Social Change, 1750-1850 (Longman: 2004). Comparison of popular and academic views concerning the social changes brought by the Industrial Revolution. According to Morgan, what major changes in work and leisure, living and health standards, religion and society, popular education, the poor laws, popular protest, and crime and justice were brought to Britain by the Industrial Revolution? Tuesday: Selections from contemporary sources (photocopies): Daniel Defoe, A Tour through the Whole Island of Great Britain (1724-26); Arthur Young, The Farmer's Tour Through the East of England (1771); Sir F. M. Eden, The State of the Poor (1797); Patrick Colquhoun, A Treatise on the Wealth, Power and Resources of the British Empire (1815); Edward Baines, History of the Cotton Manufacture of Great Britain (1836); William Cobbett, Rural Rides (1830); William Cook Taylor, Notes of a Tour in the Manufacturing Districts of Lancashire (1842); Andrew Ure, The Philosophy of Manufactures; Peter Gaskell, Artisans and Machinery (1836); Francis Place, Handloom Weavers and Factory Works (1835); Nassau W. Senior, Letters on the Factory Acts (1837); Friedrich Engels, The Condition of the Working-Class in England in 1844 (1892): and letters by Richard Oastler, and Parliamentary Commissions of 1816 and 1832. What are the major characteristics of the eighteenth century British economic system according to contemporary observers? What are the major social, economic, technological and physical changes observed? How do we account for the very different attitudes toward these changes by contemporary observers? Wednesday: Poets and a liberal critic (photocopies): William Blake, Holy Thursday, The Chimney Sweeper, London, The Little Black Boy, as well as selections describing the work of the sons of Urizen from "Vala, or the Four Zoas," and "Jerusalem, the Emanation of the Giant Albion ; William Wordsworth, The French Revolution, Composed Upon Westminster Bridge, Michael, The

2 Solitary Reaper, The World is Too Much With Us, and an excerpt from Excursions; Percy B. Shelley, The Mask of Anarchy and Call to Freedom; Lord Byron, Song of the Luddites, Wellington, and a speech in the House of Lords; Ernest Jones, The Factory Town; Michael Sadler, The Factory Girl s Last Day, and the anonymous song, General Ludd s Triumph. What are Blake's views on religion, his revolutionary ideals, and how is his role as an artisan reflected in his work? What is Wordsworth's view of nature, traditional society, and the emerging new society? How is the experience of Blake and Wordsworth reflected in their work? Selections from Robert Southey, Sir Thomas More: or Colloquies on the Progress and Prospects of Society (1829); Essays, Moral and Political (1832); and Letters From England (1807); Thomas Babington Macaulay, "Southey's Colloquies," (1830), in Critical and Historical Essays, Vol. II (photo copies). The intellectual, political, and economic context of Macaulay's and Southey's debate on the state of society and its future prospects. What are Southey's assumptions about society, religion, philosophy, and politics? What is Macaulay's view of liberalism, utilitarianism, and political economy? How do their views on the nature of history differ from each other and from ours? In what sense are Shelley and Byron radical reformers? What role do poetic works play in our contemporary understanding of the industrial revolution? Thursday: The London Metropolis and economic growth in 18 th century Britain: walking tour of the City s financial center and visits to the Bank of England Museum, and the London Dockyards Museum in the West India Company Warehouse in Docklands. Friday: Visits to the City of London Museum, the Victoria and Albert Museum, and the National Science Museum with an emphasis on the growth of London and its international trade links, British material culture and the growth of consumption from 1500 to 1900, and the role of science and technology in British industry and trade. II WEEK of July 4 Sunday: Nottingham Reception and Dinner 6:00 PM Monday: Charles Dickens, Hard Times (1854), Discussion of the Dickensonian picture of the common people in his fiction. What is the relationship of Dickens' picture of the common people in Hard Times to the industrial revolution? How are the topics of the school, marriage, and divorce related to industrialization in Hard Times? How are women portrayed in this novel and what is Dickens' view of the impact of industrialization on the family? What is Dickens' position on trades unions, class, political

3 economy, and state policy in Hard Times? Political and literary criticism of Dickens' social novels. Comparison of Southey, Macaulay, and Dickens' view of modern industry and its ideology. The relationship of literature to history? Dickens and the social novels of the 1840's and 1850's. The use and abuse of fiction as history. The political, social, and economic context of the early Victorian social novels. Tuesday: Introduction to other social novelists and critics of industrialization, such as Elizabeth Gaskell (North and South, Mary Barton), Benjamin Disraeli (Sybil), Charles Kingsley (Alton Locke), Charlotte Bronte (Shirley) Frances Trollope (Michael Armstrong), Friedrich Engels (The Condition of the English Working Class in 1844), Thomas Carlyle (Past and Present), Henry Mayhew (London Labour and the London Poor), John Ruskin (Unto This Last), William Morris (News From Nowhere), and Robert Tresssell (The Ragged Trousered Philanthropists, the 1965 edition has an introduction by Alan Sillitoe). Visual representations and society: paintings depicting scenes of nature, work, and industrial sites, including William Blake, Joseph Wright of Derby, G. P. De Loutherbourg, J. S. Gotman, Thomas Girtin, J.M.W. Turner, John Constable, Peter De Wint, and Ford Madox Brown. What are the characteristics of the romantic landscape as depicted by these artists? How do they depict work? How did they depict the new industrial sites? How do these images reflect the views of contemporary poets and writers? What has been the legacy of these views for subsequent interpretations of the period and the industrial revolution? Wednesday: Iron Bridge Gorge the birthplace of the industrial revolution? Visits to Coalbrookdale, Museum of Iron, Iron Bridge, Blist Hill Open Air Museum, and Bedlam Furnace. Thursday: John L. and Barbara Hammond, The Town Labourer: The New Civilization, 1760-1832 (1968 ed. Peter Smith). The life and economic and political context of the Hammonds. Did Barbara Hammond s gender influence how the impact of industrialization is treated in this text? The relationship of the Hammonds to the historiography of social and economic history of their day, for example, to the Webbs and Clapham. Universities and the development of economic history as academic subjects. What do the Hammonds mean by the new discipline? What is the Hammonds' view of the role of religion and industrialization? What is their view of utilitarianism and classical political economy? Comparison of the description of the poor by the Hammonds and Dickens. What kind of sources did the Hammonds use for their study and how did they use them? Recent criticism of the Hammonds' tradition of social history and new directions in the social history of the industrial revolution. Discussion of essay topics in individual seminar projects in the cooperative learning groups.

4 III WEEK of July 11 Monday: T. S. Ashton, The Industrial Revolution, 1760-1830, (1997 ed. Oxford). The career, political, and social context of T.S. Ashton. The relationship of Ashton to economics and traditions of economic history. How does Ashton explain the origin and nature of the industrial revolution? What are Ashton's chief sources and how do they differ from those of the Hammonds? What are Ashton's views on laissez faire in his history? How does Ashton seek to resolve the standard of living controversy? Comparison between Ashton's and the Hammonds' views on the wider significance of the industrial revolution and their views on future progress. Discussion of recent work in the Ashton tradition and recent criticism of Ashton's position. Tuesday: Discussion of contemporary illustrations of the technical social and cultural history of British industrialization, including sets on Railways and the Victorian Imagination and The Great Exhibition of 1851. Wednesday: Water powered rural industry: Sir Arkwright s first mill (1771) and his factory village, Cromford, Derwent Valley, Derbyshire, and Quarry Bank Mill, Styal. Thursday: E. J. Hobsbawm, Industry and Empire (1999 ed. New Press), chapters 1-5. Selections (photocopies) from P. J. Marshall, ed., The Oxford History of the British Empire, Vol. II, The Eighteenth Century (1998): Patrick K. O Brien, Inseparable Connections: Trade, Economy, Fiscal State, and the Expansion of Empire, 1688-1815, pp. 53-77; Jacob M. Price The Imperial Economy, pp. 78-105; and David Richardson, The British Empire and the Atlantic Slave Trade, 1660-1807, pp. 440-64. Selections from Andrew Porter, The Oxford History of the British Empire, Vol. III, The Nineteenth Century (1998): P. J. Cain, Economics and Empire: The Metropolitan Context; B. R. Tomlinson, Economics and Empire: The Periphery and the Imperial Economy; and Martin Lynn, British Policy, Trace and Informal Empire in the Nineteenth Century. The career and political and social context of Hobsbawm. The contribution of Marxism to historical inquiry. In what sense can we consider Industry and Empire to be Marxist history? What is Hobsbawm's view on the nature of history? What is Hobsbawm's argument on the relationship between empire and the industrial revolution? Does Hobsbawm's analysis of class differ from that of Dickens, the Hammonds, and Ashton? What is Hobsbawm's solution to the standard of living controversy? Comparison of Hobsbawm and Ashton's sources. Based on the texts, what are Ashton and Hobsbawm's views on the future progress of society? What roles do gender issues play in Ashton and Hobsbawm's

5 interpretations? Implications of recent work on the industrial revolution as an 'evolution' for both the work of Hobsbawm and Ashton. What are the connections between trade, empire, force and industrialization according to the articles from The Oxford History of the British Empire? Do their methods of analysis differ from Hobsbawm s? IV. WEEK of July 18 Monday: Louise Tilly and Joan Scott, Women, Work, and Family (Routledge, 1987 ed.), Parts I & II. The rise and nature of women's history. The relationship between feminism and historical scholarship. The contribution of historical sociology and historical demography to history. Relationship of Tilly and Scott's work to feminism, economics and sociological history. The nature of the role of women and family in the family economy of pre-industrial society? What do Tilly and Scott mean by the development of a family wage economy as a consequence of the industrial revolution? Discussion of essay topics in individual seminar projects in the cooperative learning groups. Tuesday: E. A. Wrigley, Continuity, Chance & Change: The Character of the Industrial Revolution in Britain (Cambridge 1988). How does Wrigley define the essential nature of the Industrial Revolution? How is his view of the Industrial Revolution influenced by his career in historical demography? Why does he see growth as limited in an advanced organic economy? Why is more dramatic economic growth possible in a mineral based economy? How does his interpretation of two quite different periods of economic growth fundamentally alter the traditional view of the Industrial Revolution? Why is his discussion of the Dutch Republic important for his argument? What are the implications of his questioning of the often-assumed connections between industrialization and the process of social modernization associated with capitalism and democracy for a liberal and progressive view of world history? Wednesday-Friday: Trip to the Northeast with overnight stays on Wednesday and Thursday nights at St. Aiden College, Durham University. We will visit Abbeydale scythe works in Sheffield, the National Coal Mining Museum in Wakefield, the Darlington-Stockton Railway Museum in Darlington, historical sites in New Castle-upon-Tyne, the Lead Mining Museum in Killhope, the Derwencote Steel Furnace, and the National Railway Museum in York. V. WEEK of July 25 Monday: Maxine Berg, Luxury & Pleasure in Eighteenth Century Britain (Oxford 2005). According to Berg, why was there a debate about luxury and consumption in eighteenth century Britain and how was

6 this related to economic growth? How was trade with the East a stimulus to British manufacturing and the development of a consumer society? Why is Berg s emphasis on detailed research on industrial processes important to her view that luxury goods in such industries as textiles, chinaware, glass and the hardware trades were crucial to the origin of Britain s industrial revolution? In what sense does Berg s view of the industrial revolution support earlier cataclysmic interpretations and in what sense does she support a more gradualist view? How does Berg s interpretation modify Tilly and Scott s interpretation of the history of women and the family during the period? Does Berg s interpretation have important consequences for feminist history? How does Berg s interpretations of the industrial revolution reflect important social and economic values of our own time? Tuesday: Seminar Project presentations and discussion of the industrial revolution and teaching in the schools. Wednesday: Manchester: Cottonopolis, visits to the Museum of Science and Industry, the Pump House Labour Museum, the City Center and City Art Gallery. Thursday: Seminar Project presentations and discussion of the industrial revolution and teaching in the schools. 6 PM Conference Dinner, Awarding of Certificates, and Farewell Party Friday, July 30, depart Rutland Hall after breakfast.