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Social History of Housing 1815-1985: Second Edition

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First published in 1986, for the second edition of this text (previously only covering up to 1970) in A Social History of Housing 1815–1985, John Burnett has extended his study to take account of the next fifteen years. It remains a comprehensive and important survey, covering over a century and a half of developments in housing



Originally published in 1986, for the second edition of this standard text (previously only covering up to 1970) in A Social History of Housing 1815–1985, John Burnett has extended his study to take account of the next fifteen years. It remains a comprehensive and important survey, covering over a century and a half of developments in housing conditions both urban and rural, public and private, and tracing the evolution of mass housing through by-law terraces, back-to-backs and the tower block to the low-rise, high-density estates of the 1980s.

Arvustused

Reviews for the first edition:

we have had studies of almost every aspect of housing provision, physical, social, economic and political, but no one before John Burnett has attempted to pull all these various strands together into a comprehensive account of the evolution of British housing in modern times. We must therefore be grateful that he has attempted this task and that he has succeeded so admirably. His study combines first-class scholarship with a mastery of the rich variety of source material that exists in a lively and readable style. Roof

The history of housing has been an academic growth industry in the past decade and Professor Burnetts well-illustrated book is a distinguished contribution. The Times Educational Supplement

Taking the subject from model cottages via back-to-backs to Parker Morris he provides an account of speculative, benevolent and public housing that has established itself as the text for anyone interested in how we live. As a social historian he is well aware of the gap between what people want and what the providers believe they should have. People seem to want beauty, however subjectively perceived, rather than the sanitariness which has been foremost in the minds of housing charities, committees and planners. It is a problem for them all, and for architects. Let us all read Professor Burnett. Society of Architectural Historians of Great Britain

Preface. Acknowledgements. Preface to the Second Edition. Part I:
18151850
1. People and Houses
2. The Cottage Homes of England
3. The Housing
of the Urban Working Classes
4. Middle-Class Housing Part II: 18501914
5.
Housing the Labourer
6. Housing the Multitude
7. Housing the Suburbans Part
III: 19181985
8. Council Housing 19181939
9. Speculative Housing 19181939
10. Public and Private Housing 19451985
11. Retrospect and Prospect. Notes
and References. Index.
John Burnett (19252006) was Professor of Social History at Brunel University. His research was concerned with the day-to-day lives of ordinary people. He was the author of Plenty and Want (1966), A History of the Cost of Living (1969), A Social History of Housing, 1815-1985 (1986), Liquid Pleasures: A Social History of Drinks in Modern Britain (1999) and England Eats Out: A Social History of Eating Out in England from 1830 to the Present (2004). With David Vincent and David Mayall, he published the three-volume annotated bibliography, The Autobiography of the Working Class (1984-1989).