To Punish or Protect: The New Poor Law and the English Workhouse

被引:0
作者
Charlotte Newman
机构
来源
International Journal of Historical Archaeology | 2014年 / 18卷
关键词
Workhouse; England; Poverty; Institution;
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摘要
Aimed to alleviate pauperism in nineteenth-century England, the New Poor Law of 1834 resulted in the creation of hundreds of workhouses across the English landscape. Through the workhouses’ continuing use and adaptation over nearly a 100 years, these buildings illustrate the complexities of attitudes towards, and the treatment of, the poor. In its use of the built form to understand the human experience, this research identifies the variable implementation of the policies of segregation, surveillance, and specialization to promote care and/or control. Ultimately, this multifaceted approach to the workhouse reveals how workhouse architecture reflected, and sometimes contradicted, contemporaneous attitudes towards poverty, structuring, yet not defining, a pauper’s identity.
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页码:122 / 145
页数:23
相关论文
共 3 条
[1]  
Anderson P(1980)The Leeds workhouse under the Old Poor Law, 1726–1834 Thoresby Society 17 75-113
[2]  
DeCunzo LA(2006)On reforming the “fallen” and beyond: transforming continuity at the Magdalen Society of Philadelphia, 1845–1916 International Journal of Historical Archaeology 5 19-43
[3]  
Piddock S(2001)“An irregular and inconvenient pile of buildings”: the destitute asylum of Adelaide, South Australia and the English workhouse International Journal of Historical Archaeology 5 73-95