Crowds and History: Mass Phenomena in English Towns, 1790-1835
by Mark Harrison 2020-12-29 05:25:52
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In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, urbanisation ''revolutionised'' English society as much as industrialisation. Central to this urbanising process, and the civic culture it inspired, was the bringing together of people in large n... Read more
In the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, urbanisation ''revolutionised'' English society as much as industrialisation. Central to this urbanising process, and the civic culture it inspired, was the bringing together of people in large numbers - to celebrate, commemorate, vilify or validate. Contemporary observers found the power and potential of urban crowds both awesome and alarming. They witnessed the capacity of the masses to confer honour and prestige upon a proud city elite or, by turning hostile, to bring civic ruin. Yet this ambivalent relationship between the individual and the crowd, which resonates through not only the nineteenth century but all human history, has remained generally ignored by historians. They have regarded crowds almost exclusively as a riotous, disruptive and protesting force. This book, which is the first systematic historical study of mass phenomena, challenges such preconceptions and re-defines the place of the crowd in history. Less
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  • Print pages
  • Publisher
  • Publication date
  • Language
  • ISBN
  • 8.54 X 5.47 X 1.02 in
  • 380
  • Cambridge University Press
  • June 20, 2002
  • English
  • 9780521520133
Mark Harrison is Director of the Wellcome Unit for the History of Medicine and Reader in the History of Medicine, University of Oxford, and Fellow of Green College, Oxford....
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