Knocker Ups: A Social History of Waking Up in Victorian Britain’s Industrial Towns
Author(s) -
Arunima Datta
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of victorian culture
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 0.148
H-Index - 16
eISSN - 1750-0133
pISSN - 1355-5502
DOI - 10.1093/jvcult/vcaa013
Subject(s) - newspaper , politics , position (finance) , variety (cybernetics) , everyday life , enforcement , work (physics) , social history (medicine) , industrial city , history , sociology , economy , political science , law , media studies , business , engineering , economics , industrial zone , regional science , mechanical engineering , medicine , surgery , finance , artificial intelligence , computer science
This paper examines the everyday history of one of the groups of auxiliary workers in industrial towns of Britain during the nineteenth and twentieth centuries. Drawing primarily from journal and newspaper records, this paper examines the work of knocker ups and the ways in which they became intimately tied to the lives of industries and primary industry workers. The paper then focuses on how knocker ups became highly influential in industrial towns through the multifarious jobs they performed – sometimes knowingly and sometimes less consciously. In so doing, this paper challenges the prevailing notion that auxiliaries merely served their primary clients by waking them up, and re-visualizes the position of knocker ups in industrial towns not as mere auxiliaries but as crucial contributors to social, political and economic life as well as partners in law enforcement in a broad variety of circumstances. The findings suggest a need to revise long-standing views of labour in industrial Britain.
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