Title: Patrician Society
1Patrician Society Plebeian Culture Rise of
the Middle Class?
2Sorts of People in the Eighteenth Century
- Problem for historians has been that the
eighteenth century is often viewed through the
prism of class. - Thus use terms such as the labouring poor or the
lower orders. - Some divide their studies at the pivotal year of
1750, seeing closer links between the popular
culture of the early eighteenth century and the
early modern world and linking the second half of
the century with the emergence of the working
class. - EP Thompson in his famous preface to The Making
of the English Working Class wrote I am seeking
to rescue the poor stockinger, the Luddite
cropper, the obsolete handloom weaver, the
utopian artisan, and even the deluded follower
of Joanna Southcott, from the enormous
condescension of posterity.
3Thomas Gainsborough, The Cottage Door (1780) an
example of sympathy with the rural poor?
4Thomas Gainsborough, The Housemaid, 1782-6
5Critics of patrician-plebeian dichotomy
- Thompson first propounded the patrician-plebeian
dichotomy a thesis which is still well
established and which accorded with the views of
contemporary commentators such as Oliver
Goldsmith and Henry Fielding. - It has come under attack from some recent
postmodernist studies. - Thus Kathleen Wilson in The Sense of the People
employed a different definition of the term
popular. She sums up her approach thus The term
"popular" is used like "populist" to describe
language or arguments that are supported by, or
that champion the rights of, "the people" in
political debate and activities. She goes on to
say that her examination of "popular politics"
is an investigation of socially inclusive or
accessible forms of political activity'. - She uses an inclusive definition, positing that a
dichotomous approach emphasising high versus low,
patrician versus plebeian etc. only exaggerates
the role of the middling sort and conceals the
extent to which popular culture was a shared
culture. - The danger with Wilson's definition is that
although it seeks to be inclusive it is so
extensive that it ceases to have any meaning at
all.
6Popular Culture
- Encompasses the common peoples world of
- work,
- attitudes to the natural world,
- education, literacy and knowledge,
- health practices,
- gender and generational roles,
- religious beliefs,
- recreational and leisure pursuits,
- community customs.
- rich oral culture
7Prelude to the Riot in Mount Street (Richard
Newton, 1792) A servants' dance four
men-servants face four maid-servants, in a
country-dance
8The Humours of a Country Wake (1794). Print shows
duel between two men outside a tavern other
rural scenes and pastimes represented include a
Jewish pedlar, a fiddler and street entertainers
leading bear and monkey, a group of men watching
a bull-baiting, a man running chased by bull and
a country dance.
9Relationships between elite and mass
- Often characterised as paternalist but masters
complained that the labouring poor were
subordinate and undisciplined - Defoe in his Great Law of Subordination
Considerd or the Insolence and Unsufferable
Behaviour of Servants in England duly enquird
into (1724) argued that through the
insubordination of servantsHusbandmen are
ruind, the Farmers disabled, Manufacturers and
Artficers plungd to the Destruction of Trade - Thompson argues that this was because labourers
became freer and more mobile - the advent of payment in money rather than in
kind - growth of a sector of the population who were
independent of the gentry clothing workers,
urban artisans, colliers, bargees, porters,
labourers, and petty dealers. - gentry were increasingly remote from the
populace - Leisure became secularised. There was a rich
plebeian culture. There were hobbyhorses, sweeps
on pigs, morris dancers, baitings, wrestling,
dancing, and drinking.
10Plebeian Pleasantry, after George Cruikshank 1818
11Resistance
- Thompson did not see the plebeians as a working
class. But they were a political presence. - Resistance to the gentry took the form of
anonymous threats or acts. - Plebeians employed what Thompson calls
counter-theatre of threat and sedition - Crowd were capable of taking direct action.
Crowds demanded immediate results to break
machines, intimidate employers, damage mills,
enforce bread subsidies etc.
12An effigy of a Whig minister on horseback
conducted to be burned with a gallows and a
bundle of faggots. 1756
13Hints to Forestallers or a Sure Way to Reduce the
Price of Grain, 1800
14Food riot in Newcastle, 1740
- About two on Thursday morning, a great number of
Colliers and Waggoners, Smiths and other common
workmen came along the Bridge, released the
prisoners and proceeded in great Order through
the Town with Bagpipes playing, Drum beating, and
Dirty Clothes fixed upon sticks by way of Colours
flying. They then increased to some thousands and
were in possession of the principal streets of
the Town. The Magistrates met at the Guild Hall
and scarce knew what to do - They broke into the Hutch and took out fifteen
hundred pounds, broke everything that was
ornamental, two very fine capital Pictures of
King Charles second and James second they tore,
all but the faces and afterwards conducted the
Magistrates to their own houses in a kind of Mock
Triumph.
15Changes
- Elite sanction of popular culture was gradually
withdrawn through the century. - The long-standing custom of bull-running at
Tutbury in Staffswas at odds with polite society
and suppressed by the Duke of Devonshire in 1778.
- Custom was the essential underpinning for this
society. - Custom dictated the local calendar
- Widespread custom of Saint Monday the holiday
taken at their discretion at the beginning of the
week by a variety of handworkers demonstrated a
resistance to change.
16The Four Times of Day (Night), Hogarth
(1738) Scene near Charing Cross. Celebrations of
Oak Apple Day. In the foreground a drunken
freemason is supported by a serving man to left
a barber is seen at work through a window, a
chamber pot is being emptied from a window above
and below a man and woman sleep beneath a wooden
shelter and a link boy crouches beside them to
right the Salisbury Flying Coach has crashed
while trying to avoid a bonfire in the middle of
the street.
17A unified popular culture?
- Some historians wishing to stress cultural
diversity in the eighteenth century have moved
towards models which classify popular culture
into subcultures. - Barry Reay has written of popular culture
splintering into subcultures divided by locality,
age, gender, religion and class. - Hugh Cunningham divided it into groups
Boundaries of class, of gender, of age, and of
geography, are therefore likely to be represented
in leisure and leisure activities may themselves
have reinforced or shifted those boundaries, and
not merely reflected them. - Problem with a dichotomous vision of society is
that variety and diversity are not easily
accommodated.
18Middling sort/middle class?
- Middle class difficult to define and not
necessarily a useful term for analysing the
processes of change in the eighteenth century. - Often termed the middling people of England,
the middling sort, men of a middling condition. - Originates as an interposition between rich and
poor, persons of rank and common people - John Seed defines middle class as distinguished
from the aristocracy and gentry by the need to
generate an income and from labouring class by
the possession of property and by their exemption
from manual labour. - Margaret Hunt argues the term class emerged for
contemporaries to make sense of contemporary
experiences, observations and problems.
19The Conversation Piece, Nollekens, 1740
20Size of middling sort
- Social surveys of the eighteenth century give
some idea of the social hierarchy of society. - 1 of the population were major landowners
receiving around 15 of the annual income were
mass of labouring poor in between were ranks of
the middling sort ranging from judges, state
officials and great merchants to small farmers
and semi-independent craftsmen. - Harold Perkin in The Origins of Modern English
Society estimates that there is an overall
increase in the middling sort from 435,000 in
1688 to 634,640 by 1803. - For Defoe, the middling sort were not exposed to
the miseries and hardships, the labour and
suffering of the mechanic part of mankind, and
not embarrassed with the pride, luxury, ambition
and envy of the upper part of mankind. - Leonard Schwarz places 2-3 of the London
population in the upper income bracket (average
income of 2,000 p.a. plus) and 16-21 in the
middling bracket (80-139 p.a.) the remaining 75
are a diverse body of the smaller independent
artisans, wage labourers and the unemployed.
21Importance of hierarchy
- John Smail, in his study of Halifax argues that
the middling sort viewed their world in
hierarchical terms - But deference to the landed aristocracy was
imbued with a strong sense of independence. - Margaret Hunt emphasises that the theory of
emulation should be re-evaluated. - Was often a deep ambivalence if not hostility by
the middling sort to the values of the
aristocracy and gentry.
22Formation of middle class private sphere
- Most businesses were family affairs
- Main business unit was the owner/manager or the
small partnership often consisting of family
members. - Management functions were usually carried out by
members of the family perhaps supported by a
small group of clerks, overseers, foremen etc. - Family provided capital as well as personnel.
- Central to this cultural identity was a new set
of gender relations.
23Formation of middle class - religion
- Middle class were overwhelmingly affiliated to
organised religion. - Membership of a congregation was an insignia of
middle class status and linked the middle class
family with the wider community. - Co-religionists also often provided capital.
- Social values propounded by the churches and
chapels gave ideological legitimacy to patterns
of middle class life - Membership of a religious congregation was
commitment to a whole social project.
24Formation of a middle class public sphere
- Public sphere transcended the divisive boundaries
of the religious sects. - Social world of the middling sort was determined
largely by work and residence. The emerging
middle class had a sense of a distinct social
status and strong gender differences and thus
created new forms of sociability. - Thus establishment of bodies such as subscribing
libraries, Lit Phil Societies, Assembly rooms,
debating societies etc were crucial. - New forms of sociability made a class identity by
creating a distinctive social space for the
commercial and professional elite. - For the middle class sociability was more orderly
and exclusive, and it had been differentiated
into public and private spheres
25Local or national context
- Local context is crucial when looking for the
origins of the middle class but towards the end
of the 18th century Dror Wahrman identifies the
1790s as the crucial decade there was a
transition from the local to the national. - Leonore Davidoff and Catherine Hall in Family
Fortunes use example of Isaac Taylor and his
family and the struggle they had in maintaining
their middle class identity, forged in London,
among the villagers of Lavenham in Suffolk. - Family brought their middle class culture with
them from London and refreshed it through letter
writing, reading and the occasional visit to the
metropolis. - Gradually a national middle class consciousness
influenced the local context. - National articulation of middle class values
occurred as a result of a series of political,
social and economic crises, notably, the war with
the American colonies, the French revolution and
war with France, the pressure for political
reform and the increasing economic tensions
between labour and capital. - But broader national articulations of middle
class culture came from the myriad local, mainly
urban contexts where the process of economic
change transformed the middling sort into the
middle class.