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Fighting Words: Working-Class Formation, Collective Action, and Discourse in Early Nineteenth-Century England
 
 
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Fighting Words: Working-Class Formation, Collective Action, and Discourse in Early Nineteenth-Century England [Hardcover]

Marc W. Steinberg (Author)

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Book Description

080143582X 978-0801435829 June 1999
A key component of social life, discourse mediates the processes of class formation and social conflict. Drawing on dialogic theory and building on the work of E. P. Thompson, Marc W. Steinberg argues for the importance of incorporating discursive analysis into the historical reconstruction of class experience. Amending models of collective action, he offers new insights on how discourse shapes the dynamics of popular protest. To support his thesis, he presents studies of two English trade groups in the 1820s: cotton spinners from Lancashire factory towns and London silk weavers. For each case, Steinberg closely examines the labor process, industrial organization, social life, community politics, discursive struggles, and collective actions. By describing how workers shared experiences of exploitation and oppression in their daily lives, he shows how discourses of contention were products of struggle and how they framed possibilities for collective action. Embracing work in literary theory, sociocultural psychology, and cultural studies, Fighting Words claims a middle ground between postmodern and materialist analyses.

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Inside This Book (learn more)
First Sentence:
This is a book about conjunctions and relations. Read the first page
Key Phrases - Statistically Improbable Phrases (SIPs): (learn more)
honorable artisans, solidary ties, cotton lords, dialogic struggle, shillings tuppence, dominant discursive formation, many mill owners, discursive repertoire, male weavers, contentious action, silk weavers, dialogic perspective, cotton spinners, male spinners, instrumental repertoires, equalize wages, dominant formation, city manufacturers, fighting words, honorable trade, many weavers, wealth producers
Key Phrases - Capitalized Phrases (CAPs): (learn more)
Spitalfields Acts, Bethnal Green, East End, Christ Church, Thomas Ashton, Ambrose Moore, Charles Hindley, Home Office, John Doherty, Francis Place, Manchester Statistical Society, Adam Smith, Benevolent Society, Coventry Freeman, Staley Bridge, Voice of the People, William Hale, Ashton Institution, John Leech, John Poyton, None Stated, Richard Carlile, Thomas Harrison, Board of Trade, Charles Knight
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