1st Edition

Class, Culture and Community A Biographical Study of Social Change in Mining

By Bill Williamson Copyright 1982
272 Pages
by Routledge

272 Pages
by Routledge

First published in 1982, Class, Culture and Community (now with a new preface by the author) is a biographical study of class, culture, and community in a mining village based on the life of one man, a Northumberland pitman and the author’s grandfather. It traces some of the principal social changes in British society in the twentieth century and raises issues which are central to an... Read more

Introduction  1. Heddon-on-the-Wall and fragments of a childhood  2. School and into the pit  3. Images of youth  4. Throckley  5. Pit work  6. Time off  7. Domestic work  8. Family life: the early years  9. The First World War  10. The General Strike and the miners’ lock-out, 1926  11. The depression years and retirement, 1926–36  12. Retirement, war and ripe old age  13. Conclusion

Biography

Bill Williamson is a Sociologist and Emeritus Professor of Continuing Education at Durham University, UK.

Review of the first publication:

‘It is not only its political relevance that makes Williamson's book interesting. It is also the methodological and theoretical orientation which unites sociology and history through biography and links them with modem social and cultural theory.’

— Nicolas Demertzis, Acta Sociologica, Vol. 28, No. 2