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Biographies Of Working Men
Books On Demand - EAN : 9782322542079
Édition papier
EAN : 9782322542079
Paru le : 9 juil. 2025
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- EAN13 : 9782322542079
- Réf. éditeur : 409528
- Editeur : Books On Demand
- Date Parution : 9 juil. 2025
- Disponibilite : Disponible
- Barème de remise : NS
- Nombre de pages : 94
- Format : H:210 mm L:148 mm E:7 mm
- Poids : 149gr
- Résumé : Grant Allens Biographies Of Working Men offers an unflinching portrait of individuals who shaped the Industrial Revolution through grit and ingenuity. This collection spotlights unsung heroes miners, engineers, inventors, and artisans whose lives intersected with transformative events like the rise of trade unions and technological breakthroughs. Allens narrative dismantles aristocratic historiography, recentering history on the working classs pivotal role in societal progress. The book chronicles figures such as George Stephenson, whose locomotive innovations revolutionized transportation, and Thomas Telford, a stonemason-turned-architect of canals and bridges. Allen juxtaposes their triumphs with harrowing accounts of child laborers in textile mills and coal miners facing perilous conditions, framing their struggles within broader economic and political shifts. Chapters dedicated to Luddite uprisings and Chartist protests reveal how grassroots movements pressured reforms, while profiles of self educated thinkers highlight educations democratization. Meticulously researched, the text situates itself within categories like Social History, Labor Studies, and 19th-Century Biographies. Allens prose balances scholarly rigor with empathetic storytelling, using primary sources like union pamphlets and parliamentary reports to animate his subjects. The inclusion of lesser-known figures such as women organizing covert strikes adds depth to traditional narratives of industrialization. By connecting personal resilience to systemic change, this work appeals to readers seeking both human-scale drama and macrohistorical analysis. Its emphasis on collective action over individual genius reframes the Industrial Revolution as a mosaic of ordinary lives driving extraordinary transformation.
- Biographie : Grant Allen (1848.1899) was a Canadian-born writer and social theorist whose works bridged scientific inquiry and populist advocacy. Educated at Merton College, Oxford, Allen initially pursued biology, contributing to early evolutionary studies before transitioning to literature. His eclectic career encompassed novels, essays, and pioneering works in science communication, though Biographies Of Working Men remains a cornerstone of his sociological legacy. Allens writing often challenged Victorian class hierarchies, reflecting his Fabian socialist leanings and admiration for self-made individuals. This focus on marginalized voices distinguished him from contemporaries, aligning with his belief that progress stemmed from collective effort rather than elite patronage. While best known for fiction like The Woman Who Did, his historical works, including this volume, demonstrated meticulous archival research paired with accessible prose aimed at working-class readers. Though criticized in his lifetime for radical views, posthumous reassessments highlight Allens prescient analyses of labor rights and education reform. Biographies Of Working Men exemplifies his commitment to democratizing knowledge, presenting complex socioeconomic shifts through relatable human stories. Today, his works endure as vital lenses into 19th-century struggles for equity and recognition.