Factory Workers in the British Industrial Revolution
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Description: Papers on children, men, and women as factory workers as complete texts and abstracts by Douglas Galbi.
Factory Workers in the British Industrial Revolution Factory Workers in the British Industrial Revolution The Industrial Revolution radically changed the organization of work. In the new factories, a large number of workers gathered together six or seven days a week to engage in tightly coordinated tasks paced by machinery. This new organization of work implied a sharp dinstinction between work and home. In earlier types of work, such as farming, trades, and cottage industries, work and home were not necessarily separate spheres and child labor was not a public issue.
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Page title: | Factory Workers in the British Industrial Revolution |
Keywords: | Industrial Revolution, factory workers, child labor, child labour, division of labor, division of labour, children, men, women, factories, cotton, England, Britain |
Description: | Social and economic study of child labor and the division of labor (children, men, and women) in cotton factories during the Industrial Revolution in England. |
IP-address: | 69.65.26.30 |