Volume 3 of 4. Chapters on various occupations including street-exhibitors; street- musicians, street-vocalists, street-artists and exhibitors of trained animals. Illustrations include a Punch showman; Guy Fawkes, a street-telescope exhibitor, street-acrobats performing, a street-conjurer, a circus-clown at a fair, street-peformers on stilts, and Old Sarah, a well-known hurdy-gurdy player. Illustrations of many of these entertainments. Written in the1840s, Henry Mayhew’s London Labour and the London Poor is a detailed and far reaching examination of life in Victorian London, and Victorian life in general. It is a social observation which makes use of interviews and anecdotes, particularly with the lower classes, and provides details about poverty, class, work, crime, public health, sexual immorality, racial / cultural difference, religion, diet, disability. There are also large amounts of statistical information about population, crime rates, and income, particularly in the appendix of Volume 4. It provides a clear overview of the diversity of Victorian society, and is very useful for those studying attitudes towards different races / cultures, or portrayals of disability.
Item number | 42670 |
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Category | Book |
Type | London |
Dimensions | length231mm; breadth 154mm; thickness 37mm |
Language | English |
Country of origin | UK |
Related people | Henry Mayhew (author) |
Part of the Bill Douglas and Peter Jewell Collection