The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844 - Friedrich Engels Audiobook
Language: EnglishKeywords: 
Capitalism
 Economics
 History
 Inequality
 Politics
 Sociology
 Wage-slavery
 Working-class
Shared by:daenigma100
This remarkable account has had an enduring influence on social and economic studies and has remained in print since its first English publication in 1885. It was written, in German, by a youthful Friedrich Engels, the son of a German industrialist, who was already concerned - even angered - by the conditions he saw inflicted on the working classes as the Industrial Revolution gathered momentum.
His first visit to England (1842-44) and what he saw there with his own eyes fuelled his concerns and prompted him to make this formal study. It is a remarkably mature document for a 24-year-old. Engels set out to show that the working classes in factories were far worse off in terms of general health, life expectancy, working hours and working conditions than they had been in the agricultural environment that existed in previous centuries. The 18th-century inventions such as the spinning jenny and the spinning throstle led to the growth and proliferation of factories, and the increasing use of steam and the growing demand for coal resulted in the ‘proletarians’ being subjected to more and more brutal working environments.
In business terms, it was a huge success - the demand for and the profits made in the trading of wool, cotton, linen, and the harder products of iron essential to the construction of railroads, bridges and steam ships, grew exponentially. In human terms it was a nightmare. ‘The frequent stooping and the bending to the low machines common to these branches of work have, in general, a stunting effect upon the growth of the operative. In the throstle-room of the cotton mill at Manchester, in which I was employed, I do not remember to have seen one single tall, well-built girl; they were all short, dumpy, and badly-formed, decidedly ugly in the whole development of the figure. But apart from all these diseases and malformations, the limbs of the operatives suffer in still another way. The work between the machinery gives rise to multitudes of accidents of more or less serious nature, which have for the operative the secondary effect of unfitting him for his work more or less completely. The most common accident is the squeezing off of a single joint of a finger, somewhat less common the loss of the whole finger, half or a whole hand, an arm, etc., in the machinery. Lockjaw very often follows, even upon the lesser among these injuries, and brings death with it.’
‘Manufacturing cities’ such as Liverpool, Manchester, Preston, Bolton, Rochdale and others expanded at a rapid pace, but living and working conditions were given low priority. The poverty of the working man resulted in the slums filled with garbage and rotten dwellings in which large families lived in one room. As a result, higher mortality from disease and crime was inevitable. At a meeting in Paris in 1844, Engels showed his report to Karl Marx. It had a strong effect on Marx’s future writings on economics, politics and the working classes, and the meeting engendered the close collaboration between the two which was to have such a dramatic effect on world history.
In 1892, Engels wrote a new preface to his report, outlining the developments over the intervening half century, giving a fascinating perspective. It is with this preface that this recording starts.
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| Friedrich Engels - The Condition of the Working Class in England in 1844 Audiobook.mp3 405.1 MBs | |
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This post has 10 comments with rating of 5/5
July 20th, 2020
was industrialization any better in non capitalist countries ? i think not. life for factory workers in those times was a nightmare. worse than the slaves of previous centuries
July 20th, 2020
Thanks a lot as always.
July 20th, 2020
please please post The Origin of the Family, Private Property and the State
Book by Friedrich Engels
July 20th, 2020
A tragedy of horrifying proportions that such suffering was to be weaponised and exploited, and made the occasion of the greatest atrocities in human history. The Pandora’s Box of the 20th century dark age.
July 20th, 2020
Thank you daenigma for this welcome upload. I’ve read only a couple of articles by Engels but my impression is that his prose style far surpasses in clarity and readability that of Marx. I suspect this will make for grim listening on the way to work - at wage slavery far less onerous than that of the Victorian working class, of course - but I’ll gladly give it a try.
July 20th, 2020
A brilliant and seminal work. I ask: should this be taught to all in public school? Or should their condition be disguised from the working classes?
July 20th, 2020
We shouldn’t forget that such books were mandated texts under the very worst regimes, and doubtless remain so.
July 20th, 2020
Oh, yes, this obviously needs to be disguised from the “working classes” because nothing has changed since England in 1844…
March 23rd, 2021
Just ask Charles Dickens if you don’t believe Fred
August 27th, 2022
Probably the best entry point to the historical Marxist texts, as Engels was a much more elegant writer than the rest of the canon.
Also, to those endless tiresome tribalist posts (because what you’re writing is not “political” - it’s fandom): (a) whether the Soviet/Maoist/Pol Pot/whoever regime was brutal/inhuman/murderous (they were/are) is irrelevant for a historical text that came sever decades earlier than the Bolshevik coup; (b) the same text belongs to an intellectual tradition that led to the Social Democratic/Liberal tradition that helped cause such inhuman outrages like the 8 hour day/workplace insurance/banning of child labour/old age pensions. As indeed did rightist/conservative traditions from unpleasant types like Bismarck; (c) This is more a work of journalism than of political thought - it’s early Engels; (d) Read/listen to it. You don’t have to agree with it (indeed you shouldn’t just follow something that is 200 years old just like this)- but it may help you develop your thinking, even if it’s towards conservative/rightist politics. So, relax, you won’t be polluted by touching the evil commie text.
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