In earlier studies, Peter Willmott and other investigators had
documented the social problems of new housing estates – the
loneliness, the tensions, the disruption of family and neighbourhood
ties. But how far are such troubles transitory? What kind of life
would develop in communities like these when time had rubbed off the
newness? Originally published in 1963, in search of an answer, Peter
Willmott went to Dagenham in Essex, where forty years before the
London County Council began to build a giant estate to rehouse people
from the East End of London. His study – of a new estate that had
now become an old one – throws light on the long-term effects of
this kind of migration. He found at Dagenham, most strikingly, that a
way of life very similar to a ‘traditional’ working-class
community had grown up. In this book he discusses the similarities and
differences, and shows the influences which had worked for and against
this development. After a sketch of the estate’s history, he traces
the relationships of the people of Dagenham with relatives, friends
and neighbours, and then examines their attitudes to each other, to
politics and to social class. His conclusions were not only relevant
to housing and town planning policy, but provided insight into the
meaning of social class in contemporary Britain at the time.
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A Study of Dagenham After Forty Years
Produktdetaljer
ISBN
9781000930481
Publisert
2023
Utgave
1. utgave
Utgiver
Vendor
Routledge
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Digital bok
Forfatter