This article explores the geography and culture of machine breaking in Nottinghamshire, home to the Luddite framework knitters. Earlier accounts have shed some light on why Luddism broke out in 1811-12; but they have had much less to say about why it assumed the form and the geography that it did. By situating Luddism in a longer chronological and broader historiographical context, the article suggests that it makes more sense when viewed as one of the last episodes in an older style of traditional and largely rural popular protest. Luddism in the region was a lot less moderate than previous accounts have argued, a reflection of the ‘rough’ culture of the knitters that thrived in the villages, a culture that has remained largely unexplored ...
This article applies an assemblage reading to the contemporary global woollen industry to demonstrat...
The organisation of manufacturing work, known as proto-industrialisation, was in operation in the we...
This is a study of male occupational structure in the hinterland of the market town of Alcester, War...
Original article can be found at : http://www.maney.co.uk/ Copyright Maney PublishingThe Luddite mac...
As the proto-industrial debate has already provided encouragement for a large number of regional stu...
The study of rural history and social unrest in the English countryside has concentrated largely on ...
This article examines the role of particular ideas of the countryside in unemployment relief schemes...
The small and transient worsted industry in Northamptonshire has attracted little notice from textil...
Between the 12th and 15th centuries wool created huge wealth in the British Isles. Knowledge and ski...
In the East Midlands counties of Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire levels of poaching e...
To call a place rural is to categorize it as a particular kind of place and, often, to presume that ...
This thesis focuses on one north Derbyshire township and its response to industrialization. Wire-dra...
This article compares the different, but related, activities of folklore collection and social inves...
A previous article in Rural History entitled ‘“Rustic and Rude”: Hiring Fairs and their Critics in E...
This paper explores changing patterns of collective identity amongst rural industrial producers in t...
This article applies an assemblage reading to the contemporary global woollen industry to demonstrat...
The organisation of manufacturing work, known as proto-industrialisation, was in operation in the we...
This is a study of male occupational structure in the hinterland of the market town of Alcester, War...
Original article can be found at : http://www.maney.co.uk/ Copyright Maney PublishingThe Luddite mac...
As the proto-industrial debate has already provided encouragement for a large number of regional stu...
The study of rural history and social unrest in the English countryside has concentrated largely on ...
This article examines the role of particular ideas of the countryside in unemployment relief schemes...
The small and transient worsted industry in Northamptonshire has attracted little notice from textil...
Between the 12th and 15th centuries wool created huge wealth in the British Isles. Knowledge and ski...
In the East Midlands counties of Derbyshire, Leicestershire and Nottinghamshire levels of poaching e...
To call a place rural is to categorize it as a particular kind of place and, often, to presume that ...
This thesis focuses on one north Derbyshire township and its response to industrialization. Wire-dra...
This article compares the different, but related, activities of folklore collection and social inves...
A previous article in Rural History entitled ‘“Rustic and Rude”: Hiring Fairs and their Critics in E...
This paper explores changing patterns of collective identity amongst rural industrial producers in t...
This article applies an assemblage reading to the contemporary global woollen industry to demonstrat...
The organisation of manufacturing work, known as proto-industrialisation, was in operation in the we...
This is a study of male occupational structure in the hinterland of the market town of Alcester, War...