The Condition of the Working Class in England
by Friedrich Engels
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Frederich Engels (1820-1895) was a German businessman and political theorist renowned as one of the intellectual founders of communism. In 1842 Engels was sent to Manchester to oversee his father's textile business, and he lived in the city until 1844. This volume, first published in German in 1845, contains his classic and highly influential account of working-class life in Manchester at the height of its industrial supremacy. Engels' highly detailed descriptions of urban conditions and show more contrasts between the different classes in Manchester were informed from both his own observations and his contacts with local labour activists and Chartists. Extensively researched and written with sympathy for the working class, this volume is one Engels' best known works and remains a vivid portrait of contemporary urban England. This volume is reissued from the English edition of 1892, which was translated by noted social activist Florence Kelley Wischnewetzky (1859-1932). show lessTags
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This is a pretty batshit book because it manages to somehow be genuinely uplifing (for workers, at any rate) while describing in stomach-turning detail working and living conditions that beggar belief. Deformed spines, crippled children, faeces every which way. And while banging on in equally horrific detail about prices and shillings and potatoes. Engels makes it his mission to validate entirely matter-of-factly the lived experiences of British workers, no holds barred.
The treatment of workers as no different from the machines they find themselves with no choice but to operate should sound alarm bells with the slow but steady introduction of barely functional AI chatbots into the workplace, with AI destroying previously safe tech jobs, show more and with recent news from the U.S. about Unelected Musk's feeding AI with citizens' private data to analyse what cuts should be made in the "people's" government.
Still, workers are patronised for worrying that snowballing technological advances may make their lives worse, for example in rendering their jobs either unnecessary or downright mind-numbing. Still, "vampiric property-holders" choose to leave tenants to rot in mouldy, leaking, overcrowded hovels far beyond what the law permits, despite the law permitting much. And the condescending cruelties of well-meaning "Liberals" and "Tories" alike are as stifling for workers' self expression as ever, there's just less human shit in the streets. show less
The treatment of workers as no different from the machines they find themselves with no choice but to operate should sound alarm bells with the slow but steady introduction of barely functional AI chatbots into the workplace, with AI destroying previously safe tech jobs, show more and with recent news from the U.S. about Unelected Musk's feeding AI with citizens' private data to analyse what cuts should be made in the "people's" government.
Still, workers are patronised for worrying that snowballing technological advances may make their lives worse, for example in rendering their jobs either unnecessary or downright mind-numbing. Still, "vampiric property-holders" choose to leave tenants to rot in mouldy, leaking, overcrowded hovels far beyond what the law permits, despite the law permitting much. And the condescending cruelties of well-meaning "Liberals" and "Tories" alike are as stifling for workers' self expression as ever, there's just less human shit in the streets. show less
A harrowing and frightening book. Some things really have not changed over the past two centuries.
A grisly tour of the slums of the factory towns of the Industrial Revolution. Engels, an angry young man, details the blackened suffering of the workers there, their ignorance, poverty, sickness. I recall many similar details from Mike Davis' book on a 'planet of slums', and many things I've seen too. Beggars with severed and gnarled limbs, live wires, poisoned water. The narrow maze-like patch-work buildings. Except they're not in England now - many of the slum factory-workers now are in the 'developing' world. A specter haunts not only Europe.
Although one may have criticisms of his solution, and those who have claimed to follow it, it is show more not left to any level of doubt what was wrong with the old world. A fearsome social document in its own right. show less
A grisly tour of the slums of the factory towns of the Industrial Revolution. Engels, an angry young man, details the blackened suffering of the workers there, their ignorance, poverty, sickness. I recall many similar details from Mike Davis' book on a 'planet of slums', and many things I've seen too. Beggars with severed and gnarled limbs, live wires, poisoned water. The narrow maze-like patch-work buildings. Except they're not in England now - many of the slum factory-workers now are in the 'developing' world. A specter haunts not only Europe.
Although one may have criticisms of his solution, and those who have claimed to follow it, it is show more not left to any level of doubt what was wrong with the old world. A fearsome social document in its own right. show less
Friedrich Engels' classic "The Condition of the Working Class in England" was written when he was only twenty-four, and had but recently abandoned his Calvinist upbringing for a more critical, socialist, point of view. Yet this book reads as if it were written by an experienced political commentator or a radical sociologist, without actually at any point becoming melodramatic or dense.
Engels' main purpose is to confront the bourgeoisie with the reality of their mode of production and to contrast this with the rhetoric of "free choice" and "civil liberties", as well as the capitalist apologia of the political economists of his day, in particular Andrew Ure. With great insight into both the causes and effects of the capitalist system, show more Engels catalogues the endless want, filth, despair and misery experienced by millions of labourers every day in 19th century England. He pays attention to housing, to factory safety, to unionism, to the physical condition of the workers, to alcoholism, the state of the Irish underclass, to prostitution and disease; in short, all the ills attendant on industrialization.
What gives this book such power is that Engels on the one hand proceeds in an analytical manner, making use above all of sources from the bourgeoisie itself and from Parliamentary reports, in explaining the functioning of the capitalist system and the competition between capitalists and between labourers. On the other hand, he writes in a particularly readable manner and at no point bores the reader with the mere summing-up of statistics. On the contrary, every analytical truth is accompanied by a vivid description, taken from Engels' excursions into working-class neighbourhoods, of the terrible state of humanity that the economic laws of capitalism cause for a great number of people.
For those interested in political economy, it may come as a surprise to see how much of the functioning of capitalism Engels already understood at such an early point in the development of theory. This gives the lie to the many theorists who would later claim that it was Marx only who worked on economics and that Engels was a mere epigone; this book should be a vindication of Engels. His later sketches of the political economy and of the historical development of capitalism would lay the foundation for both the Communist Manifesto and Marx' economic works. But the core insights that would create the modern theory of socialism are for the first time fully expressed here, and in a most appealing and shockingly effective manner.
In other words, an absolute must read for every person of intelligence. show less
Engels' main purpose is to confront the bourgeoisie with the reality of their mode of production and to contrast this with the rhetoric of "free choice" and "civil liberties", as well as the capitalist apologia of the political economists of his day, in particular Andrew Ure. With great insight into both the causes and effects of the capitalist system, show more Engels catalogues the endless want, filth, despair and misery experienced by millions of labourers every day in 19th century England. He pays attention to housing, to factory safety, to unionism, to the physical condition of the workers, to alcoholism, the state of the Irish underclass, to prostitution and disease; in short, all the ills attendant on industrialization.
What gives this book such power is that Engels on the one hand proceeds in an analytical manner, making use above all of sources from the bourgeoisie itself and from Parliamentary reports, in explaining the functioning of the capitalist system and the competition between capitalists and between labourers. On the other hand, he writes in a particularly readable manner and at no point bores the reader with the mere summing-up of statistics. On the contrary, every analytical truth is accompanied by a vivid description, taken from Engels' excursions into working-class neighbourhoods, of the terrible state of humanity that the economic laws of capitalism cause for a great number of people.
For those interested in political economy, it may come as a surprise to see how much of the functioning of capitalism Engels already understood at such an early point in the development of theory. This gives the lie to the many theorists who would later claim that it was Marx only who worked on economics and that Engels was a mere epigone; this book should be a vindication of Engels. His later sketches of the political economy and of the historical development of capitalism would lay the foundation for both the Communist Manifesto and Marx' economic works. But the core insights that would create the modern theory of socialism are for the first time fully expressed here, and in a most appealing and shockingly effective manner.
In other words, an absolute must read for every person of intelligence. show less
Gripping descriptions of working class conditions. Strong in utilizing statistics for population and production arguments about causation of same. Wasn't expecting a name drop of Faraday, that was a surprise. Also really interesting details on technology and its repercussions. Vivid sections on how the working conditions affected mental and physical health.
Long, dreary stretches going over the differences between Chartists and Socialists and their respective aims, though this might have been important for the intended German audience. Here's where the Penguin Classics edition could have helped the reader by supplying some background.
Exhuberant, youthful writing, that occasionally could have stood being reined in. His opinions on the show more Irish are unenlightened and cringe worthy. show less
Long, dreary stretches going over the differences between Chartists and Socialists and their respective aims, though this might have been important for the intended German audience. Here's where the Penguin Classics edition could have helped the reader by supplying some background.
Exhuberant, youthful writing, that occasionally could have stood being reined in. His opinions on the show more Irish are unenlightened and cringe worthy. show less
If a 19th century account of conditions of British proletariat can be called spine-chilling then this is it. On a different note, however, nothing much is changed in terms of universal characterizations, and working classes of the world go through more or less similar horrors all across the world. On the bottom of it, even though the classical definitions of proletariat and bourgeoisies have gone under various transformations, its always man against his destiny.
In 1845, the Condition of the Working Class in England presented the socialist solution as the necessary outcome of the British situation -- on the grounds that a revolution was preparing which would bring the Chartists to power and thus precipitate a social transformation. In 1847 Engels still thought Britain would lead the way, with Germany far in the rear, and the backward agrarian countries waiting to be transformed by the example of the more advanced. Engels could be viewed as a distant precursor of Fabian socialism, were it not for his skepticism about the likelihood of a peaceful transition, and his dislike of the pre-1848 ‘socialists’ who (unlike the ‘communists’) urged measures falling short of the abolition of private show more property in the means of production. In the 1840s socialism was commonly regarded as a philanthropic middle-class movement; hence the preference shown by Marx and Engels for the term ‘communism’. [1961] show less
This should have been my first economics book. Alas...much later in life....
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Friedrich Engels is perhaps best remembered as the confidant, colleague, and benefactor of Karl Marx. Engels was born into a Calvinist family on November 28, 1820. The family owned fabric mills in the Rhineland and had business interests in Manchester, England, Engels joined the family business at age 16; he never had a formal university show more education. Despite his family's industrial background, Engels was sympathetic to the poverty of the working masses. At age 18 he published an attack on industrial poverty, and later joined the Hegelian movement that so influenced Marx and bothered conservative Prussian authorities. Engels first met Marx in 1842, while Marx was editor of a radical newspaper in Cologne. However, they did not establish their lifelong friendship until they met again in Paris two years later. Engels published several works related to economics, the first of which, Outlines of a Critique of Political Economy (1844), attempted to reconcile Hegelian philosophy with the principles of political economy. His second book, The Condition of the Working Class in England (1845), was a damning description and condemnation of the poverty generated by the Industrial Revolution. Engels also co-authored three major works with Marx, the most important being the Communist Manifesto (1948). Engels also wrote several historical works, which are more important to historians than to economists. These include The Peasant War in Germany (1850), Germany: Revolution and Counter-Revolution (1851), and The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State (1884). In general, these works are more descriptive than theoretical, and they closely parallel Marx's views on industrialization and class struggle. In addition to being a friend of Marx, Engels was his prime benefactor for a number of years. During their early years in London, beginning in 1849, the Marx family was nearly destitute, and it was only through the generosity of Engels that they prevailed. Engels was also responsible for the publication of Marx's Das Kapital. Before his death, Marx was only able to complete the first volume of this work, and so Engels edited and arranged for the publication of the last two volumes after Marx's death. Engels was an engaging and thoughtful writer. It was perhaps his great fortune and misfortune that he was connected so closely to Marx. On the one hand, he was responsible for bringing much of Marx's work to fruition in his role as benefactor and editor. On the other hand, the shadow of Marx eclipsed some of the exposure that Engels's own ideas and contributions might have had. Engels died of throat cancer in London, 1895. Following cremation at Woking Crematorium, his ashes were scattered off Beachy Head, near Eastbourne as he had requested. (Bowker Author Biography) Friedrich Engels, German political economist, was born in what is now known as Wuppertal, in 1820. From 1842 to 1844 Engels worked in a textile mill in Manchester, England. During this time Engels theorized that all of the social unrest and worker discontent he encountered were the direct result of private ownership of property. He concluded that social ills could be eliminated only through a class struggle culminating in the end of private ownership and the establishment of a communistic form of government. The publication of his Condition of the Working Class (1844) reiterated his philosophy and his conclusions about an inevitable class struggle. Friedrich Engels first met Karl Marx in 1842. When they met again in Paris in 1844, the two men discovered they had a great similarity of views and decided to work together. They delineated the principles of communism, later known as Marxism, and their work resulted in the founding of an international communistic movement. The Communist Manifesto, penned by Marx, was based in part on a draft Engels prepared. It became renowned as the classic exposition of modern communism, and it had a profound influence upon all subsequent literature dealing with communism. Marx and Engels' partnership lasted until Marx's death in 1883. Engels carried on his work by editing the second and third volumes of Marx's Das Kapital. Friedrich Engels died in 1895. (Bowker Author Biography) show less
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- Canonical title
- The Condition of the Working Class in England
- Original title
- Die Lage der arbeitenden Klasse in England
- Original publication date
- 1844
- Important places
- Manchester, England, UK; Lancashire, England, UK; England, UK
- First words
- The history of the proletariat in England begins with the second half of the last century, with the invention of the steam-engine and of machinery for working cotton.
(from the Introduction)
The order of our investigation of the different sections of the proletariat follows naturally from the forgoing history of its rise.
(from chapter one, "The Industrial Proletariat") - Original language
- German
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- Sociology, History, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction, Economics, Philosophy, Politics and Government
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- 305.5620942 — Social sciences Social sciences, sociology & anthropology Groups of people People by social and economic levels Lower, alienated, excluded classes Working class History, geographic treatment, biography Europe England and Wales
- LCC
- HD8389 .E515 — Social sciences Industries. Land use. Labor Industries. Land use. Labor Labor. Work. Working class By region or country
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