Behind the Counter: Shop Lives from Market Stall to Supermarket

Behind the Counter: Shop Lives from Market Stall to Supermarket

by PamelaHorn (Author)

Synopsis

As Britain's population grew and the country became more urbanised and industrialised in eighteenth and early nineteenth century, so shops, shopkeepers and shopworkers also increased in number. Once people were no longer self-sufficient, so mass production stepped in to provide for their wants and improved communication and transport meant that goods could be sent to any part of the country. Pamela Horn's new book tells the story of the people who worked in the retail trade from the beginning of the eighteenth to the middle of the twentieth century. Behind the Counter reveals the largely hidden personal stories of working life in corner shops, 'high class' grocers, dress shops, department stores. For the most part, shopworkers were expected to work extremely long hours, to be obedient and subservient, even to 'live in' as if they were domestic servants. Assistants who lived in were subjected to fines for leaving bedrooms untidy, for bringing in visitors or loitering near their lodgings. Even those who didn't live in were carefully supervised. Although the trade union movement, the co-operative movement and the concerns of some enlightened employers made life a good deal better for workers, they remain among the lowest paid today.

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More Information

Format: Hardcover
Pages: 320
Edition: 1s Edition
Publisher: Sutton Publishing Ltd
Published: 24 Aug 2006

ISBN 10: 0750939303
ISBN 13: 9780750939300

Author Bio
Pamela Horn is a leading social historian of English domestic life. A writer, lecturer and examiner, her books include The Victorian Town Child, The Victorian Country Child, The Rise and Fall of the Victorian Servant, Ladies of the Manor, Women in the 1920s, Pleasures and Pastimes in Victorian Britain, Life Below Stairs in the 20th Century and Flunkeys and Scullions.