Monday 12 December 2016

Work, Life and Leisure


                 Chapter 6

                  Work, Life and Leisure

Ø  Characteristics of the City

v Cities are the centres of political power, administrative network, trade and industry, religious institutions and intellectual activity, and support various social groups such as artisans, merchants and priests.

v Three historical processes have shaped modern cities in decisive ways.

ü  The rise of capitalism

ü  The establishment of colonial rule over large parts of the world

ü  The development of democratic ideals.

Ø  Industrialisation and the Rise of the Modern City in England

v The early industrial cities of Britain such as Leeds and Manchester attracted large number of migrants to the textile mills set up in the late 18th century.

v Five major types of industries employed large number of people. These were

ü  Clothing and footwear

ü  Wood and furniture

ü  Metals and engineering

ü  Printing and stationary

ü  Precious products such as surgical instruments, watches and objects of precious metal

v During the First World War (1914-18), London began manufacturing cars and electrical goods. The number of large factories increased until they accounted for nearly one-third of all jobs in the city.
Ø  Marginal Groups

v Women

ü  Lost their industrial jobs owing to technological developments and were forced to work within households.

ü  A large number of women used their homes for increasing family income by taking lodgers or through such activities as tailoring, washing or matchbox making.

ü  In the 20th century, women got employed in wartime industries and offices and withdrew from domestic service.

v Children

ü  Large numbers of children were pushed into low paid work by their parents, while many became thieves.

ü  The Compulsory Education Act of 1870 and the Factory Act of 1902 kept children out of industrial work.

Ø  Housing

v Factories or workshops did not provide housing to the migrant workers. Instead, individual landowners put up cheap, and usually unsafe, tenements for the new arrivals.

v The unhygienic condition of slums highlighted the need of housing for the poor.

v There was widespread fear of social disorder, especially after the Russian Revolution in 1917. Workers’ mass housing scheme were planned for preventing the London poor from turning rebellious.

v Attempts were made for decongesting localities, creating open spaces and reducing pollution. Large blocks of apartments were also built.

v Rent control was introduced in Britain during the First World War for easing the impact of severe housing shortage.

v Between the two World Wars, the responsibility for housing the working classes was accepted by the British state, and a million houses, most of them single-family cottages, were built by the local authorities.
Ø  Transport in the City

v The London underground railway was introduced. It partially solved the housing crisis by carrying large masses of people to and from the city.

v 10th January, 1863: The first underground railway in the world opened between Paddington and Farrington Street in London.

v Between the two World Wars, the London tube railway led to massive displacement of the London poor.

v Better-planned suburbs and a good railway network enabled large numbers to live outside Central London and travel to work.

Ø  Social Change in the City

v In the Industrial city, ties between household members loosened, increasingly higher levels of isolation was faced and among the working class and the institution of marriage tended to break down.

v The city encouraged a new spirit of individualism among both men and women.

v The public space increasingly became a male preserve and the domestic sphere was seen as the proper place for women.

v The 19th century Chartism Movement was a movement demanding the voting rights for all adult males.

v The 10-hour movement demanded limited hours of work in factories.

v Women also demanded voting rights and the right to property from 1870s.

Ø  Leisure and Consumption

v Various methods of recreation were adopted by the working class people in the 19th century. These included
ü  Cultural events such as opera, theatre and classical music performances.

ü  Working classes met in pubs to have a drink, exchange news and sometimes for organizing political action.

ü  Libraries, art galleries and museums provided a glimpse of the British history.

v By the early 20th century, cinema became the great mass entertainment for mixed audiences.
Ø  The City in Colonial India

v The pace of urbanisation in India was slow under the colonial rule. In the early 20th century, no more than 11% of Indians were living in cities.

v Population in the Presidency towns rose considerably owing to the availability of major ports, warehouses, homes and offices, army camps, as well as educational institutions, museums and libraries.

v Bombay: The Prime City of India
ü  Bombay was a group of seven islands.

ü  1661: The control of Bombay passed into the British hands after the marriage of Britain’s King Charles II to the Portuguese princess.

ü  Bombay became the principal Western port for the East India Company. At first, Bombay was the major outlet for cotton textiles from Gujarat.

ü  It became an important administrative and industrial centre of Western India.

ü  1819: Bombay became the capital of the Bombay Presidency after the Maratha defeat in the Anglo-Maratha war.

ü  1854: First cotton textile mill was established in Bombay

ü  1919-1926: Women formed 23% of the mill workforce

ü  Late 1930s: Women’s jobs were increasingly taken over by machines or men


ü  With the rapid and unplanned expansion of the city, the crisis of housing and water supply became acute by the mid-1950s.

ü  More than 70% of the working people lived in the thickly-populated chawls of Bombay. Chawls were multi-storeyed old structures.

ü  Merchants, bankers and building contractors owned these chawls. Each chawl was divided into one-room tenements with no private toilets.

ü  Lower castes were kept out of many chawls and often had to live in shelters made of corrugated sheets, leaves or bamboo poles.

ü  Town planning emerged from fears of social revolution and the fears about the plague epidemic.

ü  1898: The City of Bombay Improvement Trust was established. It focused on clearing poor homes out of the city centre.

v Land Reclamation in Bombay

ü  The need for additional commercial space in the mid-19th century led to the formulation of several government and private plans for the reclamation of more land from sea.

ü  1864: The Back Bay Reclamation Company won the right of reclaiming the Western foreshore from the tip of Malabar Hill to the end of Colaba.

ü  As population started growing in the early 19th century, every bit of the available area was built over and new areas were reclaimed from the sea.

v Bombay as the City of Dreams: The World of Cinema and Culture

ü  1896: Harishchandra Sakharam Bhatwadekar shot a scene of a wrestling match in Bombay’s Hanging gardens and it became India’s first movie.

ü  1913: Dadasaheb Phalke made Raja Harishchandra

ü  By 1925, Bombay became the film capital of India.

ü  Many people in the film industry were migrants from cities such as Lahore, Madras and Calcutta.

Ø  Cities and the Challenge of the Environment

v Large quantities of refuse and waste products polluted air and water, while excessive noise became a feature of urban life.

v Black fog engulfed the towns owing to pollution, thereby causing bad temper and smoke-related illnesses.

v The Smoke Abatement Acts of 1847 and 1853 did not work to clean the air as smoke was not easy to monitor or measure.


v By 1840s: Towns such as Derby, Leeds and Manchester had laws for controlling smoke in the city.

v In Calcutta, high level of pollution was a consequence of the huge population that depended on dung and wood as fuel, and also the use of steam engines that ran on coal.

v The railway line introduced in 1855 introduced a new pollutant-coal from Raniganj.

                               1863: Calcutta became the first Indian city to get smoke nuisance legisla.