1st Edition

Modern English Society History and Structure 1850-1970

By Judith Ryder, Harold Silver Copyright 1970

    First published in 1970, Modern English Society is primarily concerned with the period since the Great Exhibition of 1851. Judith Ryder and Harold Silver begin by surveying the consequences, good and ill, of industrialization, and go on to explore the changing pattern of social relationships to which it gave rise. They discuss such topics as the growth of towns and of large-scale administration, the development of welfare services, the emergence of mass politics, the mass media and mass production. They show how social attitudes, and the interpretation of historical facts are colored by our ideological views. In the second half of the book, they examine the structure and functioning of contemporary social institutions – the family, education, the economic and political systems – and assess their implications for the individual, for specific social groups, and for society as a whole. This book will be of interest to students of history and sociology.

    List of illustrations Preface Acknowledgement Introduction Note on contents and layout 1. The making of nineteenth-century society 2. Towns, people and problems 3. Democracy and social movements 4. New dimensions, new attitudes 5. Twentieth-century emergencies 6. Open and industrial changes 7. Social class, social conflict and social change 8. Education and social mobility 9. The family and the social system 10. Politics and communications Conclusion Guide to further reading Appendix Index

    Biography

    Judith Ryder and Harold Silver