Proximity and Segregation in Industrial Manchester
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Abstract Manchester has long been a model for the class divisions characteristic of British Victorian cities, and this segregation has largely been attributed as a spatial phenomenon as informed by qualitative sources from the period. The digitization of historical source material, however, allows for quantitative assessments of residential differentiation. By analysing patterns of residential distribution using nineteenth-century, individual-level census data, it is revealed that early Victorian Manchester was characterized more by residential heterogeneity than segregation. In light of this finding, this article revisits the source base for early Victorian Manchester in order to reconcile the differences in the physical and social dimensions of segregation for a more accurate and holistic understanding of urban dynamics and the mechanisms of class formation. It explains this dissonance by exploring the city’s architectural, occupational, and cultural structures: while rich and poor lived cheek-by-jowl in the industrial city, temporal rhythms of employment, institutionalized cultures of class, and emerging modes of urban maintenance and discipline all produced practices which differentiated and isolated one class from another.
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Acknowledgements: I would like to thank Simon Szreter and Pedro Ramos-Pinto for their guidance over the course of this research and writing process, as well as Simon Gunn for his advice on an early draft of this article. My gratitude also extends to the Cambridge Group for the History of Population and Social Structure for providing such an encouraging and motivating environment for work.
Publication status: Published
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1469-5103

