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Charles Booths London Poverty Maps [Kietas viršelis]

4.70/5 (46 ratings by Goodreads)
  • Formatas: Hardback, 288 pages, aukštis x plotis: 365x265 mm, weight: 2360 g, 1231 Illustrations, unspecified
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Oct-2019
  • Leidėjas: Thames & Hudson Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0500022291
  • ISBN-13: 9780500022290
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
  • Formatas: Hardback, 288 pages, aukštis x plotis: 365x265 mm, weight: 2360 g, 1231 Illustrations, unspecified
  • Išleidimo metai: 24-Oct-2019
  • Leidėjas: Thames & Hudson Ltd
  • ISBN-10: 0500022291
  • ISBN-13: 9780500022290
Kitos knygos pagal šią temą:
A splendid and necessary publicationa great resource Iain Sinclair

Charles Booths landmark survey of life in late-19th-century London, published for the first time in one volume.

In the late nineteenth century, Charles Booth's landmark social and economic survey found that 35 percent of Londoners were living in abject poverty. Booth's team of social investigators interviewed Londoners from all walks of life, recording their comments, together with their own unrestrained remarks and statistical information, in 450 notebooks. Their findings formed the basis of Booth's colour-coded social mapping (from vicious and semi-criminal to wealthy) and his seventeen-volume survey Inquiry into the Life and Labour of the People of London, 1886-1903.

Organized into six geographical sections, Charles Booth's London Poverty Maps presents the hand-colored preparatory and printed social mapping of London. Accompanying the maps are reproductions of pages from the original notebooks, containing anecdotes and observations too judgmental for Booth to include in his final published survey. An introduction by professor Mary S. Morgan clarifies the aims and methodology of Booth's survey and six themed essays contextualize the the survey's findings, accompanied by evocative period photographs.

Providing insights into the minutia of everyday life viewed through the lens of inhabitants of every trade, class, creed, and nationality, Charles Booth's London Poverty Maps brings to life the diversity and dynamism of late nineteenth-century London.

Recenzijos

'A splendid and necessary publication a great resource' - Iain Sinclair '[ An] exquisite edition of Booths maps' - BBC Radio 3: Free Thinking 'Booths maps have been beautifully reproduced in [ this] new book' - LSE Review of Books 'What Booths poverty maps ultimately show is a London where rich and poor lived right next door to each other: in that sense, at least, todays London is no different' - Guardian 'Compelling once you start you cant stop' - BBC Radio London: The Robert Elms Show 'A visual shrine to the Booth survey the essays are all accomplished and informative and really do help spell out the context in which the maps were produced these large-scale maps are a delight and it is a joy to have them' - Times Literary Supplement 'Charles Booths famous maps of Victorian London offer a chance to reflect on how the city has changed - and how it hasnt' - Bloomberg 'Exquisite the book really is a beautiful thing, with a reverence for the source material and playfulness in the design' - World of Interiors

Daugiau informacijos

Charles Booths landmark survey of 19th-century London, published for the first time in one volume alongside the researchers' revelatory notebooks
Forward: Mapping the Abyss. Introduction. Eastern District &
North Eastern District Housing. Northern District & North-Western
District Immigration. East Central District & West Central
District Religion. Inner Western District & Outer Western
District Trade. Inner Souther District & South-Western District
Morality. Outside Southern District & South Eastern District
Leisure.
Mary S. Morgan is Professor of the History of Economics in the London School of Economics. Iain Sinclair is a writer and filmmaker. Much of his work is rooted in London, most recently within the influences of psychogeography.