This brand new item is available with free UK delivery using Royal Mail tracked services.
Please note that the price advertised is as low as we can go, we do not accept offers.
This is a landmark intellectual history of Britain’s working classes from the preindustrial era to the twentieth century. Drawing on workers’ memoirs, social surveys, library registers, and more, Jonathan Rose uncovers which books people read, how they educated themselves, and what they knew. A new preface addresses the continuing relevance of the book amidst the upheavals of the present day. “An astonishing book.”—Ian Sansom, The Guardian “A passionate work of history. . . . Rose has written a work of staggering ambition.”—Daniel Akst, Wall Street Journal Winner of the SHARP Book History Prize, the American Philosophical Society’s Jacques Barzun Prize, and the British Council Prize cowinner of the Longman-History Today Book of the Year Prize for 2001; named one of the finest books of 2001 by The Economist.
| ISBN | 9780300257847 |
| Format | Paperback |
| Author | Jonathan Rose |
| Publisher | Yale University Press |
| Number of Pages | 560 |
| Length | 19.900 cm |
| Width | 13.400 cm |
| Depth | 4.800 cm |
| Weight | 0.5860 kg |