Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Daniel Defoe and the Social Structure of Pre-Industrial England

View through CrossRef
Abstract This chapter uses Defoe’s classification of English society into seven social strata to understand the gradations of rank in England prior to the Industrial Revolution. In the Review, Defoe wrote that English men and women fell into the following social levels: ‘the Great, who live profusely’; ‘the Rich, who live very plentifully’; ‘the middle Sort, who live well’; ‘the working Trades, who labour hard, but feel no Want’; ‘the Country People, Farmers, &c. who fare indifferently’; ‘the Poor, that fare hard’; and ‘the Miserable, that really pinch and suffer Want’. The chapter challenges simplified understandings of Defoe which see him announcing and embracing the rise of the middle class, promoting ‘middle-class gentility’, or embodying liberal and democratic ideals. It addresses Defoe’s social conservatism, the centrality of the possession of landed property to his understanding of the political nation, and the compatibility with this outlook of his consistent championing of trade.
Title: Daniel Defoe and the Social Structure of Pre-Industrial England
Description:
Abstract This chapter uses Defoe’s classification of English society into seven social strata to understand the gradations of rank in England prior to the Industrial Revolution.
In the Review, Defoe wrote that English men and women fell into the following social levels: ‘the Great, who live profusely’; ‘the Rich, who live very plentifully’; ‘the middle Sort, who live well’; ‘the working Trades, who labour hard, but feel no Want’; ‘the Country People, Farmers, &c.
who fare indifferently’; ‘the Poor, that fare hard’; and ‘the Miserable, that really pinch and suffer Want’.
The chapter challenges simplified understandings of Defoe which see him announcing and embracing the rise of the middle class, promoting ‘middle-class gentility’, or embodying liberal and democratic ideals.
It addresses Defoe’s social conservatism, the centrality of the possession of landed property to his understanding of the political nation, and the compatibility with this outlook of his consistent championing of trade.

Related Results

Defoe’s Critical Reception, 1731–1945
Defoe’s Critical Reception, 1731–1945
Abstract Since his death in 1731, Daniel Defoe has attracted a vast range of responses, both for his literary achievements, wider social ideas, and his personality a...
Defoe and Christianity
Defoe and Christianity
Abstract Daniel Defoe was raised as a Presbyterian, a Dissenter from the established Church of England, at a time when Nonconformists were persecuted for their faith...
Defoe and Satire
Defoe and Satire
Abstract This chapter examines Daniel Defoe’s satirical output. It demonstrates the importance of satire in Defoe’s literary career and suggests that he was often a ...
Defoe and London
Defoe and London
Abstract Daniel Defoe was a Londoner born and bred, and across his writings he explores the significance of the capital at a time when London underwent rapid growth ...
Study on the characteristics and synergistic effects of industrial complex networks – empirical evidence from Chinese manufacturing
Study on the characteristics and synergistic effects of industrial complex networks – empirical evidence from Chinese manufacturing
PurposeThe manufacturing industry and the producer service industry have a high degree of industrial correlation, and their integration will cause changes in the complex industrial...
Daniel Defoe in Context
Daniel Defoe in Context
Innovative in its structure and approach, Daniel Defoe in Context contains 42 essays by leading scholars illuminating the life, times, and world of Daniel Defoe. Defoe is one of th...
Family and Domesticity in Defoe’s Writings
Family and Domesticity in Defoe’s Writings
Abstract Daniel Defoe’s writings have been cited by both sides in the debate over whether family structures were characterized by change or continuity in early moder...

Back to Top