The Growth of Working Class Reformism in Mid-Victorian England
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Taylor & Francis Ltd
Published:1st Aug '25
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The post-Chartist period saw an easing of class tensions and the growth of a reformist working class. Using evidence based upon the cotton districts of north-west England, the author shows that enhanced socio-political stability owed much to economic restabilisation in his book The Growth of Working Class Reformism in Mid-Victorian England (originally published in 1985).
This book examines new and neglected areas of investigation, including the interplay between class and ethnicity and the institutional and sociological roots of reformism, and brings fresh evidence to bear upon more familiar areas of debate, such as trends in living standards.
A materialist explanation of reformism and stability is propounded. Central importance is attached to the notion of an increasingly fragmented working class operating in a secure economic system which offered enhanced scope for class manoeuvre and labour’s advancement. The working class did not become incorporated, collaborationist, or deferential. The frequency of class struggle and continued working class independence could not, however, conceal the fact that the broad features of the system had been accepted. Piecemeal advancement became the order of the day.
Review of the first publication:
‘Neville Kirk's well-organized and clearly argued book, focusing upon the cotton district in the 1850-70 period, is a regional study of a particularly significant area.’
— Robert Sykes, Social History, Volume 11, Issue 2
ISBN: 9781041017608
Dimensions: unknown
Weight: 870g
386 pages