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Francis Hearn, Domination, Legitimation, and Resistance: The Incorporation of the Nineteenth-Century English Working Class. Westport and London: Greenwood Press, 1978. 209 pp.
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 December 2008
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- Copyright © International Labor and Working-Class History, Inc. 1979
References
NOTES
1. Foster, J., Class Struggle and the Industrial Revolution (1974)Google Scholar; Tholfsen, T.R., Working-Class Radicalism in Mid-Victorian England (1976)Google Scholar; Gray, R.Q., The Labour Aristocracy in Victorian Edinburgh (1976)Google Scholar; Crossick, G., An Artisan Elite in Victorian Society (1978);Google Scholar P. Joyce, Work, Society and Politics: The Factory North of England in the Second Half of the Nineteenth Century (forthcoming).
2. For a perceptive survey of the use of the concept of the labor aristocracy in the historiography of the British working class, see Moorhouse, H.F., “The Marxist Theory of the Labour Aristocracy,” Social History 3 (1978).CrossRefGoogle Scholar
3. Williams, , Culture and Society (1963, Penguin ed.), 312–314.Google Scholar
4. See Thompson, E.P., “Eighteenth-Century English Society: Class Struggle without Class?,” Social History 3 (1978)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; ibid., “Patrican Society, Plebian Culture,” Journal of Social History 7 (1974); ibid., “The Moral Economy of the English Crowd,” Past and Present 50 (1971); also, Fox-Genovese, E., “The Many Faces of Moral Economy,” Past and Present 58 (1973).Google Scholar
5. See Hay, D., Linebaugh, P., Thompson, E.P., eds. Albion's Fatal Tree (New York, 1975)Google Scholar, particularly Hay, D., “Property, Authority and the Criminal Law”; Thompson, E.P., Whigs and Hunters (London, 1975).Google Scholar
6. Jones, G. Stedman, “From Historical Sociology to Theoretical History,” British Journal of Sociology 27 (1976).CrossRefGoogle Scholar