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THE INDUSTRIOUS REVOLUTION, THE INDUSTRIOUSNESS DISCOURSE, AND THE DEVELOPMENT OF MODERN ECONOMIES*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  08 May 2014

ALEXIS D. LITVINE*
Affiliation:
Trinity College, Cambridge

Abstract

The idea of industriousness has been an ever-recurring issue since Max Weber launched it as a putative explanation of the advent of economic modernity. The notion of ‘industrious revolution’ has provoked a renewed flourishing of publications focusing on this issue. Although most historians agree on the emergence of industriousness in seventeenth-century Europe, there is no consensus regarding the chronology, hence the real causes, of this mental and discursive shift. This article emphasizes the problematic role played by literary evidences in these social and cultural models of diffusion of new consumer values and desires. It then establishes the timing of the emergence of the ‘industriousness discourse’ using an original approach to diffusion based both on the quantitative analysis of very large corpora and a close reading of seventeenth-century economic pamphlets and educational literature. It concludes first that there was not one but several competing discourses on industriousness. It then identifies two crucial hinges which closely match the chronology proposed by Allen and Muldrew, but refutes that championed by de Vries and McCloskey. The industrious revolution as described by these authors would have happened both too late to fit its intellectual roots and too early to signal the beginning of a ‘consumer revolution’.

Type
Historiographical Review
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press 2014 

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Footnotes

*

I am extremely grateful to Peter Mandler, Craig Muldrew, participants in the Early Modern Economic and Social History seminar, and two anonymous referees, for their comments on previous versions of this article. I am also indebted to Andrew Hardie, Jean-Baptiste Michel, and Paul Schaffner for allowing me to use their data and to Billy Janitsch, Andreas Vlachos, and Andrew Wilson for technical assistance.

References

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2 de Vries, J., ‘Between purchasing power and the world of goods: understanding the household economy in early modern Europe’, in Brewer, John and Porter, Roy, eds., Consumption and the world of goods (London, 1993), pp. 85132Google Scholar; de Vries, J., ‘The Industrial Revolution and the industrious revolution’, Journal of Economic History, 54 (1994), pp. 249–70Google Scholar; de Vries, J., ‘Luxury and Calvinism/luxury and capitalism: supply and demand for luxury goods in the seventeenth-century Dutch Republic’, Journal of the Walters Art Gallery, 57 (1999), pp. 7386Google Scholar; de Vries, The industrious revolution.

3 De Vries, The industrious revolution, pp. 43 and 52.

4 See Bologh, R. W., Dialectical phenomenology: Marx's method (London, 1979), pp. 76–9Google Scholar, and on Marx and the dual normative conception of needs (good and bad needs) and their historical development, see Hamilton, L., The political philosophy of needs (Cambridge, 2003)Google Scholar.

5 De Vries, The industrious revolution, p. 44.

6 Ibid., p. 52.

7 See for example Robertson, H. M., Aspects of the rise of economic individualism: a criticism of Max Weber and his school (Cambridge, 1933)Google Scholar; Tawney, R. H., Religion and the rise of capitalism: a historical study (London, 1926)Google Scholar; MacKinnon, M. H., ‘Part i: Calvinism and the infallible assurance of grace: the Weber thesis reconsidered’ and ‘Part ii: Weber's exploration of Calvinism: the undiscovered provenance of capitalism’, British Journal of Sociology, 39 (1988), pp. 143210Google Scholar.

8 De Vries, The industrious revolution, p. 52.

9 McCloskey, Bourgeois dignity, p. 12.

10 For a good example of what a cultural analysis of the diffusion of desire means, see Peck, L. L., Consuming splendor: society and culture in seventeenth-century England (Cambridge, 2005)Google Scholar, ch. 3. The best analysis of the seventeenth-century redefinition of honestas in civic communities is Withington, P., The politics of commonwealth: citizens and freemen in early modern England (Cambridge, 2005)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

11 McCloskey, Bourgeois dignity, pp. 16–17.

12 Ibid., p. 23.

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14 McCloskey, Bourgeois dignity, pp. 29 and 339–45.

15 See Ashworth, W. J., ‘The ghost of Rostow: science, culture and the British Industrial Revolution’, History of Science, 153 (2008), pp. 249–74Google Scholar.

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19 The very blurry definition of what a book is in the early modern period reduces the significance of this sort of figure, but it gives a good idea of the size of the sample.

20 The analysis of this database was made possible thanks to the Bookworm software developed by B. Janitsch and M. Camacho at the Harvard Cultural Observatory.

21 The EEBO database includes books from the English Short Title Catalogue i and ii (based on the Pollard & Redgrave and Wing short-title catalogues) and the Thomason Tracts and the Early English Books Tract Supplement. Together, they amount to more than 125,000 books published between 1475 and 1700. The Text Creation Partnership (TCP) subset represents roughly 40 per cent of all these records. For details about the TCP project, see www.textcreationpartnership.org/tcp-eebo. All these records have been transcribed by hand so they should be (in principle) immune to OCR-related errors. It is not, however, a perfect sample; the order in which these texts are transcribed depends on requests by scholars and librarians from participating institutions around the world. Thus, these 50,000 might not be representative of the full dataset. The figures given in this article are based on the last version of the dataset that was released in November 2012.

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26 The number of books (in absolute value) represented in Fig. 3 corroborates this interpretation.

27 This follows the argument in Slack, , ‘Material progress and the challenge of affluence in seventeenth-century England’, Economic History Review, 62 (2009), p. 592Google Scholar, that early English ‘political economy’ made material improvement palatable.

28 These verses from King James 1611 were quoted many times as, for example, in the Treatise of the covenant of grace posthumously published in 1645 by J. Ball (p. 186).

29 See, for example, John Wheeler, secretary of the Merchants Adventurers, A treatise of commerce: wherein are shewed the commodities arising by a well ordered and ruled trade, such as that of the Societie of Merchants Aduenturers is proued to be: written principally for the better information of those who doubt of the necessarinesse of the said societie in the state of the realme of England (London, 1601), p. 22.

30 Hesiod, Aristophanes, and Plato had already used the comparison, but it is Aristotle who theorized its political dimension. For the use of the comparison by Christian writers see Johnson, J. W., ‘That neo-classical bee’, Journal of the History of Ideas, 22 (1961), pp. 262–6Google Scholar. Danielle Allen has recently argued against Johnson periodization, but her evidences – mostly from beekeeping treatises – is far from conclusive. See Allen, D., ‘Burning the Fable of the bees: the incendiary authority of nature’, in Daston, L. and Vidal, F., eds., The moral authority of nature (Chicago, IL, 2004), p. 75Google Scholar. Ants have a similarly ancient pedigree reflected by Prov. 6.6, which in the King James translation reads ‘Go to the ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise.’

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39 W. M. Halliwell-Phillipps, The man in the moone, telling strange fortunes, or, The English fortune-teller, 1609, especially the ‘prodigall’ and ‘serving-man’ chapters.

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45 The first ‘prentice’, Godling, was industrious, while the other, Quicksilver, was characterized by his prodigality and their fates were radically opposed. See Sommerville, C. J., The discovery of childhood in puritan England (Athens, GA, 1992), p. 81Google Scholar, and cf. Heywood, T., The four prentices of London (London, 1615)Google Scholar.

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47 See the texts listed in Sommerville, C. J., ‘The anti-puritan work ethic’, Journal of British Studies, 20 (1981), pp. 7081Google Scholar. We can also observe the consequences of this pragmatic and temporary relaxation in the Protestant economic morality in Anthony Horneck's sermons in the 1680s and 1690s.

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49 Ibid., p. 392. See also Hundert, E. J., The Enlightenment's fable: Bernard Mandeville and the discovery of society (Cambridge, 1994)Google Scholar, ch. 2.

50 Hundert, The Enlightenment's fable, p. 111.

51 Mandeville, B., The fable of the bees: or, Private vices, publick benefits, 3rd edn 1724Google Scholar, ‘Remark K, On prodigality’, pp. 105–6. Partially quoted in Hundert, The Enlightenment's fable, p. 206.

52 As these time-series are non-stationary (both globally and in these sub-periods), I have tested them for cointegration. Whereas the two series are not cointegrated for the period 1820–1914 (the p-value obtained with the Augmented Dickey-Fuller test for the residual series is 0.36 and the test-statistic is bigger than the 10 per cent critical value), for the period 1710–1820 the two series are cointegrated (the ADF p-value is 0.00 and the t-statistic is much smaller than the 1 per cent critical value). In both cases, the lag length was determined according to the Schwarz Info Criterion.

53 McCloskey, Bourgeois dignity, p. 27.

54 Muldrew, Food, energy and the creation of industriousness, p. 300; Richards, J., Rhetoric and courtliness in early modern literature (Cambridge, 2003), p. 91Google Scholar.

55 Muldrew, Food, energy and the creation of industriousness, p. 304.

56 Parker, H., Of a free trade, a discourse seriously recommending to our nation the wonderfull benefits of trade, especially of a rightly governed and ordered trade (London, 1648)Google Scholar; Blith, W., The English improver improved, or, The svrvey of hvsbandry svrveyed (London, 1649)Google Scholar. See also Petyt, W., ‘Britannia Languens’, in McCulloch, J. R., A select collection of early English tracts on commerce, from the originals of Mun, Roberts, North, and others (London, 1856), pp. 275505Google Scholar, and Papillon, T., A treatise concerning the East India trade being a most profitable trade to the kingdom, and best secured and improved by a company and a joint-stock (London, 1677)Google Scholar.

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59 R. Allestree, The whole duty of man, laid down in a plain and familiar way for the use of all,… with private devotions for several occasions, 1704 (1st edn, 1658), p. 31.

60 W. Blith, ‘Epistle to the husbandman, farmer, or tenant’, in The English improver, or, A new survey of husbandry: discovering to the kingdome that some land, both arrable and pasture, may be advanced double or treble, other land to a five or tenfold and some to a twentyfold improvement, yea some not now worth above one or two shillings per acree be made worth thirty or forty, if not more (London, 1649).

61 Houghton, J., England's great happiness, or, A dialogue between content and complaint: wherein is demonstrated that a great part of our complaints are causeless, and we have more wealth now than ever we had at any time before the restauration of His Sacred Majestie (London, 1677)Google Scholar, reproduced in McCulloch, A select collection of early English tracts on commerce, pp. 251–74, here, pp. 261–2.

62 Vries, The industrious revolution, p. 68.

63 Sommerville, ‘The anti-puritan work ethic’, p. 73.

64 Slack, From reformation to improvement, chs. 4–5.

65 The two series are non-stationary (both globally and in the relevant subsets) and the computed p-value for the ADF test for the period 1640–1710 is nil whereas it rises to 0.30 after this date.

66 Petty, W., ‘Englands guide to industry, or, Improvement of trade for the good of all people in general’, in Chamberlayne, E., The fourth part of The present state of England [electronic resource]: relating to its trade and commerce within it self and with all countries traded to by the English, as it is found at this day established (London, 1683)Google Scholar, ch. 6, p. 82.

67 Although according to Christopher Berry this phenomenon only became manifest after 1650, Linda Peck has recently shown that it had been a dominant issue in treatises about the general interest since the time of the repeal of sumptuary laws by James I. See Berry, C. J., The idea of luxury: a conceptual and historical investigation (Cambridge 1994)Google Scholar, and Peck, Consuming splendor.

68 Fortrey, England's interest, reproduced in McCulloch, A select collection of early English tracts on commerce, pp. 211–50.

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74 Muldrew quotes North's A discourse of the poor in which he criticizes rising wages as favouring the leisure preference for workers and undermining industriousness. See Muldrew, Food, energy and the creation of industriousness, p. 309, and North, R., A discourse of the poor (London, 1753, but written in the 1680s), pp. 5860Google Scholar.

75 Muldrew, Food, energy and the creation of industriousness, p. 317; Sommerville, The discovery of childhood, p. 81.

76 Child, J., A new discourse of trade  (London, 1693)Google Scholar.

77 See Barbon, N., A discourse of trade (London, 1690), p. 14Google Scholar, which de Vries particularly likes to quote: ‘Desire implys Want: It is the Appetite of the Soul, and is as natural to the Soul, as Hunger to the Body.’

78 The Bristol merchant John Cary published a very popular protectionist pamphlet in 1695, reissued several times up to 1764, in which he urges English manufacturers to be more industrious and emulate the ‘Progresses [that] have already been made step after step by our Manufacturers to imitate, and in many things to exceed all they have seen abroad.’ Cary, J., An essay on the state of England: in relation to its trade, for carrying on the present war against France (Bristol, 1695), p. 57Google Scholar.

79 For a criticism of the way the societies intended to curb prostitution see, for example, Mandeville, B. (written under the pseudonym of Phil Porney), A modest defence of publick stews: or, an essay upon whoring, as it is now practis'd in these kingdoms (London, 1724)Google Scholar.

80 Slack, From reformation to improvement, pp. 119–20.

81 This is particularly conspicuous in Hale, M., A discourse touching provision for the poor (London, 1683), pp. 519–36Google Scholar. It corresponds almost word for word with what Muldrew argues.

82 Child, A New discourse about trade.

83 Davenant, C., Discourses on the publick revenues, and on the trade of England (London, 1698), pp. 74 and 77Google Scholar. This is a point forcefully made in Berg and Eger, Luxury in the eighteenth century.

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85 Muldrew also quotes Gough, R., Human nature displayed in the history of Myddle (London, 1834; 1st edn 1701), p. 29Google Scholar. This local historian does not extensively use ‘industrious’ and out of five uses of ‘industry’, only one is not opposed directly to ‘labour’.

86 De Vries, The industrious revolution, pp. 66–7 n. 70.

87 Hont, ‘The early Enlightenment debate on commerce and luxury’, pp. 395–403.

88 Defoe, The complete English tradesman, pp. 65–8.

89 B. Franklin, ‘Self-denial not the essence of virtue’, Pennsylvania Gazette, 5 Feb. 1734.

90 It also shows that the educational discourse remains significant, too. The secondary interest of this analysis, which uses a database altogether different from the Google digitization project, is to corroborate the more extensive N-gram results. The data is available through http://bookworm.culturomics.org.

91 Allen, R. C., The British Industrial Revolution in global perspective (Oxford, 2009)Google Scholar; Allen and Weisdorf, ‘Was there an "industrious revolution" before the Industrial Revolution?’, is a recent exponent of the economic determinism school. Allen argues that industriousness was chiefly the result of hardship. Consumers had to put in more work to maintain their level of consumption rather than to increase it. Most of the ‘consumer revolution literature’ is biased towards anthropological or psychological determinisms. See the seminal work by McKendrick, N., Brewer, J., and Plumb, J. H., The birth of a consumer society, the commercialization of eighteenth-century England (London, 1982)Google Scholar. A third form of (rather unfortunate) determinism is bound to gain more prominence in the historiography with the development of crypto-genetic evolutionist theories like that proposed by Clark, G. in his recent Farewell to alms (Princeton, NJ, 2009)Google Scholar.

92 Weber is close to Nietzsche's conception of genealogy: the psychological drive being an archetypical form of moral evolution.