Labour and Working-Class Lives: Essays To Celebrate the Life and Work of Chris Wrigley
Labour and Working-Class Lives: Essays To Celebrate the Life and Work of Chris Wrigley
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Abstract
Labour and working-class lives is a collection of essays in honour of the work and publications of the eminent and influential historian Professor Chris Wrigley. They are written by a number of leading historians – Joan Allen, Ken Brown, Malcolm Chase, Dick Geary, Kevin Jefferys, Keith Laybourn, Nicole Robertson, Andrew Thorpe, Jan Shepherd, John Shepherd, Noel Whiteside and Matthew Worley. They also draw upon a wide range of topics and offer the latest research on British labour, social and economic history. These include the study of trade unionism in relation to the Labour Party, state insurance, and the organisation of women. There are studies of both political and pressure groups, such as the Independent Labour Party, Progressive League and the Co-operative Movement. Some of the essays examine the political contribution made by figures within, or on the fringes, of the history of labour in Britain, including the Lansburys and the Herbert Gladstone. There is also a comparative study of the cultural milieu of the British and German working classes. The final essay examines the topical and almost constant question ‘Must Labour Lose?’ This collection is therefore an essential and vital contribution to the study of modern British and labour history and a fitting tribute to the inspirational work in the field made by Chris Wrigley.
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Front Matter
- Introduction
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1
George Howell, the Webbs and the political culture of early labour history
Malcolm Chase
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2
The appointment of Herbert Gladstone as Liberal Chief Whip in 1899
Kenneth D. Brown
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3
A question of neutrality? The politics of co-operation in north-east England, 1881–1926
Joan Allen
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4
Transforming the unemployed: trade union benefits and the advent of state policy
Noel Whiteside
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5
The trade union contribution to the British Labour Party
Andrew Thorpe
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6
The disaffiliation crisis of 1932: the Labour Party, the Independent Labour Party (ILP) and the opinion of ILP members
Keith Laybourn
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7
Voices in the wilderness? The Progressive League and the quest for sexual reform in British politics, 1932–59
Janet Shepherd
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8
Working-class culture in Britain and Germany, 1870–1914: a comparison
Dick Geary
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9
Women at work: activism, feminism and the rise of the female office worker during the First World War and its immediate aftermath
Nicole Robertson
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10
‘We never trained our children to be socialists’: the next Lansbury generation and Labour politics, 1881–1951
John Shepherd
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11
Comrades in bondage trousers: how the Communist Party of Great Britain discovered punk rock
Matthew Worley
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12
Must Labour lose? Lessons from post-war history
Kevin Jefferys
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End Matter
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