The Gilded Age and Working-Class Industrial Communities

In the United States, industrial management techniques shifted from strong paternalistic controls to absentee forms of ownership in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Tracing the change of industrial management techniques in a mill community that survived through the Gilded Age shows the impact...

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Veröffentlicht in:American anthropologist 2006-12, Vol.108 (4), p.828-841
Hauptverfasser: Shackel, Paul A., Matthew M. Palus
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Matthew M. Palus
description In the United States, industrial management techniques shifted from strong paternalistic controls to absentee forms of ownership in the late 19th and early 20th centuries. Tracing the change of industrial management techniques in a mill community that survived through the Gilded Age shows the impact of industrialization on consumerism and health in working-class households. Initial examination of the archaeological record shows that the domestic material world of workers' households became similar to each other while consumer goods increased significantly. We suggest that with the transition of management techniques from minimal paternalism to absenteeism, a trend developed toward homogenization of some everyday material culture. However, living in a marginal geography promoted a countertrend among workers and their families, and alternatives to market-oriented consumption allowed for "insurgent" forms of citizenship. Understanding the historical consequences of industry for workers and their families is relevant for understanding the situation of marginalized labor today.
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source Sociological Abstracts; JSTOR Archive Collection A-Z Listing; Wiley Free Content; Wiley Online Library All Journals
subjects 19th century
20th century
Alternatives
Anthropology
Archaeological sites
Business
Capitalism
Child labor
Citizenship
Communities
Community
Consumerism
Consumption
Contemporary problems
domestic life
Domesticity
Economic behaviour. Consumption
Economic sociology
Families & family life
Ferries
Geography
Gilded Age
Health
Historic buildings & sites
Historical archaeology
History and organization of sociology
History, theory and methodology
Households
Industrial development
Industrial management
Industrialization
Labor
Labor force
Labour
Living conditions
Manufacturing
Marginality
Market economies
Material culture
Ownership
Paternalism
Pulp mills
Social history
Sociology
Sociology of economy and development
Towns
U.S.A
Urban areas
Workers
Working class
Working conditions
title The Gilded Age and Working-Class Industrial Communities
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