The Rise of Professional Society

The Rise of Professional Society

by Professor Harold Perkin (Author)

Synopsis

This long awaited sequel to The Origins of Modern English Society explores the rise of the forgotten middle class' to show a new principle of social organisation. A rare example of a work both accessible to the general reader and indispensable to the professional scholar.' - The Observer No social historian can afford to be without it.' - New Statesman and Society ...an audacious and exciting piece of synthesis. His mastery of political, economic, social and urban history is intimidating.' - New York Review of Books Now available in paperback, this book is the long awaited sequel to The Origins of Modern English Society . Stimulating and controversial, it will be widely read by all those who seek an understanding not just of Britain since 1880, but of all mature economies of the world today. The theme is the rise of 'the forgotten middle class', the non capitalist or professional class which the chief social commentators left out of their analyses. England, like all post-industrial societies, has come to be dominated by growing numbers of 'experts'. As Harold Perkin shows, a new principle of social organization has emerged, based on trained expertise, selection and reward by merit - in a word, on professionalism.

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Quantity

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More Information

Format: Paperback
Pages: 624
Edition: 1
Publisher: Routledge
Published: 26 Jul 1990

ISBN 10: 041504975X
ISBN 13: 9780415049757

Media Reviews
Like its predecessor, it is both magesterial and provocative.
- Labour History Review
No social historian can afford not to read it.
- New Statesman and Society
. . . the two volumes taken together are outstanding.
- Financial Times
A large, richly-packed book about the professionalisation of expertise. It is accessible to the general reader, indispensable to the scholar, and a solid achievement of synthesis and clarity.
- Observer
The argument is deployed with exhilarating zest and organizing power . . . [Perkin] marshals the evidence with immense clarity and vigour . . . a major in some ways heroic contribution to the debate on postwar British history.
- Twentieth Century British History