pregleda

John Burnett - A Social History of Housing 1815-1970


Cena:
2.190 din (Predmet je prodat)
Stanje: Polovan sa vidljivim znacima korišćenja
Garancija: Ne
Isporuka: Pošta
Plaćanje: Tekući račun (pre slanja)
Grad: Novi Sad,
Novi Sad
Prodavac

ndi (2719)

PREMIUM član
Član je postao Premium jer:
- ima 100 jedinstvenih pozitivnih ocena od kupaca,
- tokom perioda od 6 meseci uplati minimum 20.000 dinara na svoj Limundo račun.

100% pozitivnih ocena

Pozitivne: 4756

  Pošalji poruku

Svi predmeti člana


Kupindo zaštita

ISBN: Ostalo
Godina izdanja: 1978
Jezik: Engleski
Autor: Strani

U dobrom stanju, pečat biblioteke i potpis na predlistu

A Social History of Housing: 1815-1970: by JOHN BURNETT.
Andover: Methuen & Co. Ltd. 1980. pp. 344.

At long last we have a history of English housing that carries the story right up to the present period. In his well-researched and well-written account of A Social History of Housing: 1815-1970, John Burnett sets out to describe the types of dwellings occupied by the working and middle classes, to measure and evaluate changes in the quality of housing, and finally “to seek an explanation of the determinants of built form” (p. vii). He accomplishes his objectives very well.

Although Burnett docs not break new ground in his treatment of nineteenth-century urban housing, he presents a clear and concise synthesis based upon the standard primary and secondary sources. He is especially effective in his analysis of the middle-class house. According to Burnett, the middle-class choice of a house was less dictated by rational concerns like size, location, and cost than by Victorian values of privacy, respectability, social identification, comfort, and accumulation.

Burnett balances his treatment of urban housing with an excellent analysis of cottage homes and the general housing of the rural workers. Despite the publicity given to the deplorable condition of the laborers’ “rustic” cottages, Burnett argues that economic and financial considerations militated against significant improvement in rural housing until the end of the First World War.

Burnett does break new ground with his chapters on housing in twentieth-century England. He emphasizes the importance of the 1918 report of the Tudor Walters Committee, which gave its stamp of approval to subsidized local authority housing in low-density suburban estates. But the housing problem was not solved in the interwar years. Burnett suggests that private builders and local authorities failed to provide sufficient dwellings at a level of rent affordable to the poorer workers.

According to Burnett, the post-World War II period witnessed a dramatic increase in house building due to full employment and a rising standard of living. He sees the most significant improvement occurring in the houses of the working classes; the semi-detached house in a low-density development became much more available to the working classes. Because of the reduction in the size of the family and the disappearance of domestic servants, this post-World War II period saw a reduction in the size and number of rooms in the average middle- class house. Thus working-class and middle-class house types have converged since World War II. Burnett concludes that for the majority of the English people, the ideal still remains the individual house in a garden.

Burnett’s perceptive study of the social history of English housing is a welcome addition to the literature; it will be of interest to specialists in the field as well as to graduates and undergraduates.
NEIL L. KUNZE

John Burnett is an expert on the social history of Britain. His many books include the major Plenty and Want (1989), Idle Hands (1996) and Liquid Pleasures (1999), which won the Andre Simon Prize for best drinks book of the year.


engleska, društvena istorija, kultura stanovanja

¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤

L_I_Č_N_O______P_R_E_U_Z_I_M_A_NJ_E_:
Za kupovine ukupne vrednosti preko 2.000 dinara moguće lično preuzimanje u Puškinovoj u Novom Sadu. Ako je za pojedinačnu knjigu navedena samo opcija Pošta, lično preuzimanje samo te knjige nije moguće. U Novom Sadu moguća je lična dostava i plaćanje preko službe Eko-kurir (cena je 250-300 din).

STANJE KNJIGE:
Knjiga koju dobijate je ona koja je na slici. Ukoliko nije naznačeno da je knjiga nova ili nekorišćena, ponekad se desi da na predlistu stoji potpis, posveta ili pečat i da to nije navedeno u opisu. Ako vam takve stvari smetaju, pitajte me pre kupovine da proverim.

KOMUNIKACIJA:
Komunikacija ide isključivo preko Kupindo poruka, ne telefonom. Budite normalni.

POPUSTI, CENKANJE I SL.:
Cena je ta koja piše, molim vas da mi ne šaljete pitanja o poslednjoj i zadnjoj ceni niti svoje kontraponude.


SLANJE:
Knjige šaljem kao tiskovinu ili CC paket nakon uplate na račun. Pakujem ih bezbedno i pažljivo, dobijate ih u stanju u kojem su poslate. Poštarina za jednu pošiljku obično iznosi od 190 do 260 din, u zavisnosti od težine. To je poštarina za tiskovinu, CC paket je skuplji, post ekspres je najskuplji. Za četiri i više pojedinačno kupljenih knjiga (u to ne spadaju kompleti) ja snosim troškove poštarine. Potrebno je da uplatite/preuzmete knjigu u propisanom roku od 7 dana.

SUSEDNE ZEMLJE I INOSTRANSTVO:
Poštarina je za jednu knjigu visoka i okvirno se kreće od 10-15 eur za prvu i oko 7 eura za svaku dodatnu knjigu. Postoji mogućnost znatno isplativijeg slanja za teže pakete. Uplate PayPalom (+10%), direktno na devizni račun, Western Union ili Moneygram. Najbolje je da pre kupovine pitate koliki su troškovi dostave, jer su često veći od cene same knjige.

INTERNATIONAL ORDERS:
I will send abroad. For your calculation, one hundred dinars roughly equals $1. Please register here:
https://www.limundo.com/Registracija/Kupindo
and then PM me on the link below for postage costs (they usually start at around 15 euro for the first book and 7 euro for each additional one)
https://www.kupindo.com/Clan/ndi/PostaviPitanje

MOJA PONUDA:
Nove knjige postavljam gotovo svaki dan. Možete ih pratiti na ovom linku http://www.limundo.com/Clan/ndi (pritisnite dugme `Prati`)
¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤¤

Predmet: 67971573
U dobrom stanju, pečat biblioteke i potpis na predlistu

A Social History of Housing: 1815-1970: by JOHN BURNETT.
Andover: Methuen & Co. Ltd. 1980. pp. 344.

At long last we have a history of English housing that carries the story right up to the present period. In his well-researched and well-written account of A Social History of Housing: 1815-1970, John Burnett sets out to describe the types of dwellings occupied by the working and middle classes, to measure and evaluate changes in the quality of housing, and finally “to seek an explanation of the determinants of built form” (p. vii). He accomplishes his objectives very well.

Although Burnett docs not break new ground in his treatment of nineteenth-century urban housing, he presents a clear and concise synthesis based upon the standard primary and secondary sources. He is especially effective in his analysis of the middle-class house. According to Burnett, the middle-class choice of a house was less dictated by rational concerns like size, location, and cost than by Victorian values of privacy, respectability, social identification, comfort, and accumulation.

Burnett balances his treatment of urban housing with an excellent analysis of cottage homes and the general housing of the rural workers. Despite the publicity given to the deplorable condition of the laborers’ “rustic” cottages, Burnett argues that economic and financial considerations militated against significant improvement in rural housing until the end of the First World War.

Burnett does break new ground with his chapters on housing in twentieth-century England. He emphasizes the importance of the 1918 report of the Tudor Walters Committee, which gave its stamp of approval to subsidized local authority housing in low-density suburban estates. But the housing problem was not solved in the interwar years. Burnett suggests that private builders and local authorities failed to provide sufficient dwellings at a level of rent affordable to the poorer workers.

According to Burnett, the post-World War II period witnessed a dramatic increase in house building due to full employment and a rising standard of living. He sees the most significant improvement occurring in the houses of the working classes; the semi-detached house in a low-density development became much more available to the working classes. Because of the reduction in the size of the family and the disappearance of domestic servants, this post-World War II period saw a reduction in the size and number of rooms in the average middle- class house. Thus working-class and middle-class house types have converged since World War II. Burnett concludes that for the majority of the English people, the ideal still remains the individual house in a garden.

Burnett’s perceptive study of the social history of English housing is a welcome addition to the literature; it will be of interest to specialists in the field as well as to graduates and undergraduates.
NEIL L. KUNZE

John Burnett is an expert on the social history of Britain. His many books include the major Plenty and Want (1989), Idle Hands (1996) and Liquid Pleasures (1999), which won the Andre Simon Prize for best drinks book of the year.


engleska, društvena istorija, kultura stanovanja
67971573 John Burnett - A Social History of Housing 1815-1970

LimundoGrad koristi kolačiće u statističke i marketinške svrhe. Nastavkom korišćenja sajta smatramo da ste pristali na upotrebu kolačića. Više informacija.