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Essay on Change in Urban Society |
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This is the first 1,000 characters of 1650 words (6.6 pages) in the essay titled Change in Urban Society
At the end of the 18th century a revolution in energy and industry began in England and spread rapidly all around Europe later in the 19th century, bringing about dramatic and radical change. A significant impact of the Industrial Revolution was that on urban society. The population of towns grew vastly because economic advantage entailed that the new factories and offices be situated in the cities. The outlook of the city and urban life in general were profoundly modified and altered. Modern industry created factory owners and capitalists who strengthened the wealth and size of the middle class. Beside the expansion of the bourgeoisie, the age of industrialization saw the emergence of a new urban proletariat - the working class. The life of this new group and its relations with the middle class are controversial issues to modern history. Some believe that the Industrial Revolution inevitably caused much human misery and affliction. Other historians profess that Industrialization brought economic improvement for the laboring classes. Both conclusions should be qualified to a certain extent. Economic growth does not mean more happiness. Given the contemporary stories by people at that time, life in the early urban society seems to have been more somber than historians are usually prow to describe it. No generalities about natural law or inevitable development can blind us to the fact, that the progress in which we believe has been won at the expense of much injustice and wr...
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Keywords: rapid population growth, impact of the industrial revolution, urban society, industrialization, 19th century, historians, europe, proletariat, controversial issues, bourgeoisie, inevitable development, human misery, economic improvement, economic advantage, radical change, prow, european cities, affliction, somber
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