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Leisure, Community and the Settlement Movement
Book chapter

Leisure, Community and the Settlement Movement

Leisure, Voluntary Action and Social Change in Britain, 1880-1939, pp.35-50
Bloomsbury Academic
05/04/2018

Abstract

Arts & Humanities Hospitality, Leisure, Sport & Tourism Social Sciences - Other Topics Area Studies History Social Sciences Sociology
Walter Besant’s novel All Sorts and Conditions of Men and Andrew Mearns’ The Bitter Cry of Outcast London, published in 1882 and 1883 respectively, stimulated middle-class interest in the urban slum as a separated community. Together with social surveys they contributed to a topographical imagination of the late-Victorian city, which, in Rosalind Williams’ terms, posited the slum as a subterranean social underworld inhabited by a dispossessed class. At a time when degenerationist theories were fashionable, the slum seemed to herald a collapse of civilization. Helen Dendy (later Bosanquet), a leading figure in the Charity Organisation Society, expressed a widely held view in describing its population as a ‘residuum’ characterized by lack of foresight and self-control. To middle-class reformers the slum constituted a challenge to address the spatial and cultural distances between prosperous and poor communities.
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