Image for East End 1888 : Life in a London Burough Among the Laboring Poor

East End 1888 : Life in a London Burough Among the Laboring Poor

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"East End I888" documents in minute detail the social, political, and economic life in the notorious slums of East London during the reign of Queen Victoria.

The setting for Jack the Ripper's atrocities, East End was synonymous with crime, filth, disease, and the dregs of humanity.

W. J. Fishman focuses on a single year, one century ago and one century after the storming of the Bastille.

Poignant accounts of homeless families choosing starvation rather than submitting to the inhumanity and separation of the workhouse are contrasted with lively reports of entertainment in music halls and "penny gaffs" or freak shows, where Joseph Merrick, The Elephant Man, was discovered.

Providing numerous excerpts from contemporary newspapers, police records, workhouse journals, novels, medical reports, church sermons, and political debates, Fishman illuminates a slice of life in Victorian England.

William J. Fishman is Professor of Political Studies at Queen Mary College, University of London.

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Product Details
Temple University Press,U.S.
0877225729 / 9780877225720
Hardback
29/06/1988
United States
352 pages, illustrations
159 x 241 mm, 748 grams
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