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Full Description
Victorian Dundee: a city grown prosperous on more than a century's lead in linen production and for a time the world's jute capital - 'Juteopolis'. But textile production was accompanied by a strong sense of civic pride, some remarkable architectural triumphs and perhaps a surprising enthusiasm for public and private art.
The traditional view of Dundee in this period is of a grim industrial town marred by social deprivation and riven by workplace conflict. This was only part of the story, and comes later. Early Victorian Dundee provided regular work and better wages than had been paid in the countryside (many of the town's inhabitants were migrants). Working people enjoyed spending money as well as earning it and were able to enjoy a range of social amenities such as the town's grand parks.
This book, the first edition of which attracted very favourable reviews, reveals aspects of Dundee that have been hidden from history. This second, extended edition of Victorian Dundee: Image and Realities goes further than the 2000 edition in challenging myth-history. Included are two altogether new chapters. One is on the development - and desecration - of Dundee's ancient waterfront, resulting from the opening of new rail routes. The other reveals who Dundee' s local heroes were, in the shape of the public statues erected in Albert Square. Original chapters have been revised whilst in addition the book is supplemented by more than forty new illustrations that offer fresh and sometimes stunning visual perspectives on a great Scottish city.
This is the third in the series Dundee - A New History, the others being Jute No More: Transforming Dundee which span Dundee's history from the sixteenth century to the present. Dundee: Renaissance to Enlightenment.
Contents
List of Figures, List of Plates, List of Tables, Preface and Acknowledgements, List of Contributors
Introduction: Altering Images by Christopher A. Whatley, Bob Harris and Louise Miskell
1 'Not even the trivial grace of a straight Line'
Or Why Dundee Never Built a New Town by Charles McKean
2 The Growth and Development of the Port of Dundee in the Nineteenth and Early Twentieth Centuries by William Kenefick
3 Civic Leadership and the Manufacturing Elite: Dundee, 1820-1870 by Louise Miskell
4 Altering Images of the Industrial City: The Case of James Myles, the 'Factory Boy', and Mid-Victorian Dundee by Christopher A. Whatley
5 'From the Grampians to the Firth of Forth': The Development of the Dundee Royal Infirmary by Lorraine Walsh
6 'An Insurrection of Maids': Domestic Servants and the Agitation of 1872 by Jan Merchant
7 The Grey Lady: Mary Lily Walker of Dundee by Myra Baillie
8 Docks, Railways or Institutions: Competing Images for Mid-Nineteenth-Century Dundee by Rob Duck and Charles McKean
9 Contesting Memory and Public Spaces: Albert Square and Dundee's Pantheon of Heroes by Christopher A. Whatley
10 The Patron, the Professor and the Painter: Cultural Activity in Dundee at the Close of the Nineteenth Century by Murdo MacDonald
11 Red Tayside? Political Change in Early Twentieth-Century Dundee by John Kemp
12 'City of the Future': James Thomson's Vision of the City Beautiful by Bob Harris
Notes, Index



