Social history, and urban history in particular, has
become increasingly concerned, in recent years, with
studying the middle class. Historians have
progressed from a concern with the ‘success’ or
‘rise’ of the middle classes, to a study them
per se both in quantitative and
qualitative terms: questions concerning their
wealth, consumption patterns, residential
preferences, representation within the political
leadership as well as their beliefs, values and role
in attention. Urban historians have a particular
interest in the study of the local middle class, in
a way that takes into account the finer detail of
different kinds of urban environment and the
complexities of the urban experience. Since much of
urban history has been at pains to discover the
variety of patterns in urban development and urban
society, it is not surprising that recent
specialized studies of individual towns and cities
have revealed a great variety in the bases of class
relations. Indeed, the traditional Marxist notion of
a single national class interest is now open to
qualification. The disparity between London and the
provinces in respect of class interests has long
been recognized. An extension of the proposition
inherent in that disparity will contend here that
there were different types of middle class located
in different types of urban environment. Such a
proposition is not in itself pathfinding or
particularly new. There are problems, however, in
deciding in what ways such a differentiated pattern
can be drawn out, examined and presented in coherent
form.