The Industrial Revolution

Front Cover
Bloomsbury Academic, 1992 - Business & Economics - 244 pages
The period c. 1760 to 1830 used to be seen as a watershed in the transition to modern industrial society. More recently historians have disputed the existence of fundamental change in economic, social, or political life at this time. The British industrial revolution is quietly disappearing from the history books. Hudson challenges this development, arguing that the process of revision has gone too far: continuity has been emphasized at the expense of change and many historically unique features of the economic and society of the period have been unjustly neglected. This new edition retains the successful structure of the highly praised original but extends the author's defense of the dynamism of the period with greater coverage of social and cultural changes, trust and networks as well as innovation, trading, and financial developments. The text is fullu updated to take account of major new research during the past decade.

About the author (1992)

Pat Hudson is Professor of Economics and Social History at the University of Liverpool.