Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: Dead Man's Town
- 2 Rotherham: history, demography and place
- 3 Class and the objectifying subject: a reflexive sociology of class experience
- 4 A landscape with figures?
- 5 Understanding the barriers to articulation
- 6 Necessity and being working class
- 7 The culture of necessity and working class speech
- 8 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Index
2 - Rotherham: history, demography and place
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- 1 Introduction: Dead Man's Town
- 2 Rotherham: history, demography and place
- 3 Class and the objectifying subject: a reflexive sociology of class experience
- 4 A landscape with figures?
- 5 Understanding the barriers to articulation
- 6 Necessity and being working class
- 7 The culture of necessity and working class speech
- 8 Conclusion
- Notes
- References
- Index
Summary
This country had a grim will of its own, and the people had guts … There was no communication between Wragby Hall and Tevershall village –none. No caps were touched, no curtseys bobbed. The colliers merely stared: the tradesman lifted their caps to Connie as to an acquaintance, and nodded awkwardly to Clifford: that was all. Gulf impassable, and a quiet sort of resentment on either side. At first Connie suffered from the steady resentment that came from the village. Then she hardened herself to it, and it was a sort of tonic, something to live up against. It was not that she and Clifford were unpopular – they merely belonged to another species altogether from the colliers. Gulf impassable, breach indescribable, such as is perhaps non-existent south of the Trent. But in the Midlands and the industrial North, gulf impassable, across which no communion could take place. – You stick to your side, I'll stick to mine! – A strange denial of the common pulse of humanity.
(Lawrence 1994: 14)Not a town in the land is unscarred by the dogmatic application of the market principle.
(Hutton 1996a)Themes of power, coercion, and collective resistance shape landscape as a social microcosm.
(Zukin 1991: 19)Rotherham: a brief history
Rotherham, the hamlet on the Rother, is one of those places characterized, in the heyday of industrial production, by smoke-excreting steelworks and the unearthly towers that supported colliery headgear.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A Phenomenology of Working-Class Experience , pp. 32 - 62Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1999