As steam-powered industrialization intensified in mid-nineteenth century Britain, the rate and severity of workplace injuries spiked. At the same time, a range of historical dynamics made working class people individually responsible for bearing the effects of industrial injury and carrying on in the aftermath of accidents without support from state or company. By the midcentury, railway accidents were represented as events that put on display the moral character of individual rail workers and widows, rather than — as in radical rhetorics of previous decades — the rottenness of state or company bureaucracies. Bearing injury or loss in a reserved manner came to appear as a sign of domestic virtue for working class women and men, though the p...
This thesis examines the development of trade unionism in the Lanarkshire coalfield in the century a...
The common law rules of fellow servant, assumption of risk, and contributory negligence posed a seri...
This research examines the genesis of district nursing in England, and in particular explores the wa...
The railway accident as an agent of traumatic experience occupies an important place in the history ...
This thesis explores some aspects of the cultural history of the railway during the latter half of t...
Most social histories of the working class have focussed on women's or men's experiencealone. Howeve...
As controversy concerning the future of Britain's railways continues to be voiced, their influence i...
This essay considers the representation of women's work and disability in British coalfields literat...
The steam railway was novel in almost every sense: its birth along the Liverpool to Manchester line ...
This dissertation looks at the relationship between industrialisation and welfare by asking what arr...
Since 1979 when Wolfgang Schivelbusch applied Marx’s phrase “annihilation of time and space” to the ...
Recognizing the railroad's importance as both symbol and experience in Victorian America, Amy G. Ric...
Victorian Britain is characterized by the growth of an urban industrial economy and the emergence of...
This paper examines the extent to which the Midland Railway workforce in nineteenth-century Derby co...
Despite unpromising beginnings, the railways of New South Wales and Victoria by 1905, had emerged as...
This thesis examines the development of trade unionism in the Lanarkshire coalfield in the century a...
The common law rules of fellow servant, assumption of risk, and contributory negligence posed a seri...
This research examines the genesis of district nursing in England, and in particular explores the wa...
The railway accident as an agent of traumatic experience occupies an important place in the history ...
This thesis explores some aspects of the cultural history of the railway during the latter half of t...
Most social histories of the working class have focussed on women's or men's experiencealone. Howeve...
As controversy concerning the future of Britain's railways continues to be voiced, their influence i...
This essay considers the representation of women's work and disability in British coalfields literat...
The steam railway was novel in almost every sense: its birth along the Liverpool to Manchester line ...
This dissertation looks at the relationship between industrialisation and welfare by asking what arr...
Since 1979 when Wolfgang Schivelbusch applied Marx’s phrase “annihilation of time and space” to the ...
Recognizing the railroad's importance as both symbol and experience in Victorian America, Amy G. Ric...
Victorian Britain is characterized by the growth of an urban industrial economy and the emergence of...
This paper examines the extent to which the Midland Railway workforce in nineteenth-century Derby co...
Despite unpromising beginnings, the railways of New South Wales and Victoria by 1905, had emerged as...
This thesis examines the development of trade unionism in the Lanarkshire coalfield in the century a...
The common law rules of fellow servant, assumption of risk, and contributory negligence posed a seri...
This research examines the genesis of district nursing in England, and in particular explores the wa...