Adaptation to Industrialization: German Workers as a Test Case
- 16 December 1970
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in Central European History
- Vol. 3 (4) , 303-331
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0008938900000261
Abstract
Historians, in their somewhat defensive perusal of sociology for sweeping theoretical statements, perhaps underestimate the careful, often narrow, empiricism of much sociological research. Sociologists unearth facts for subsequent historians to work on and sometimes to interpret more broadly. Historical sociologists to the contrary, fact-grubbing services are mutual in the two disciplines. German sociologists were the first to study the social effects of industrialization extensively. By the early twentieth century, when masses of workers were still entering factory industry for the first time, sociologists were ready to investigate the process of adaptation through systematic interviews. British researchers in the same period, besides being dedicated amateurs for the most part, focused on the urban poor and on material conditions too exclusively still. French efforts were even more scattered. Maurice Halbwachs did some valuable studies of consumption patterns, while Le Play and his school contributed rather conservative portraits of individual workers. For purposes of understanding the working class in manufacturing, German sociological research was long unrivaled.Keywords
This publication has 1 reference indexed in Scilit:
- Die Wohlfahrtseinrichtungen der Arbeitgeber in Deutschland und FrankreichPublished by Duncker & Humblot GmbH ,1905