Proto Industrialisation
Proto Industrialisation
Proto Industrialisation
Spring
10
1990
Proto-industrialisation
Proto-industrialisation (PI) is considered to be a phase in the
development of modern industrial economics which preceded and
paved the way for industrialisation proper. Mendels first put forward
the notion two decades ago [1]. He had two basic propositions. First,
the proto-industrial phase was dominated by the spread of rural
domestic manufacturing which linked more and more families to the
pulse of national and international markets. Secondly, rural
industrialisation was so widespread and so dynamic economically and
socially that it became the major force propelling economies in the
direction of phase two, or industrial capitalism proper, based in
centralised urban production.
From these propositions an exciting and novel field of debate has
arisen exploring the links between industrial development and social,
political and cultural life, and seeing these as integrated rather than
separate fields of study. Thus, increasing involvement of men, women
and children in manufacturing has been related to their changing
agrarian roles, gender attitudes, sex lives, age of marriage, and living
standards. Also to the emergence of regional specialisation,
commercial, financial, and work skills which were vital for later more
mechanised and more urbanised society.
Mendels model
In this model the PI phase in West Europe dated from the late
seventeenth to the early nineteenth century and was set in train by
overseas demand. Urban production with high wage costs and guild
restrictions responded less well to the demand for cheap mass
manufactures than did rural areas. There labour was cheap,
manufacture was carried out largely as a by employment (often
seasonal), and there existed a range of peasant handicraft skills,
particularly in textiles and metalwares, which could be harnessed to
commercial production. PI was thus a process of regional
specialisation occurring as a result of comparative advantage. As
infertile upland areas adopted manufacturing sidelines, their food
needs stimulated inter-regional trade in agricultural products.
So the emergence of large-scale commercial agriculture and the
seen to have paved the way for continuous expansion and innovation
into phase two. Similarly, the extension of manufacturing skills in the
workforce is stressed, including adaptation to divisions of labour
which created repetitive tasks and-which could separate workers from
the finished product of
Other perspectives
The Kreidte, Medick and Schlumbohm (KMS) model [4], though
rather differently specified, includes most of the dynamic factors first
stressed by Mendels. They argue that PI characterised the transitional
period in Europe between a domination of feudal structures in the
middle ages and fully fledged industrial capitalism from the
nineteenth century onwards. By viewing PI as a distinct
socio-economic system or mode of production KMS expose what was
unique to the period, and also clarify how social and cultural changes
can be
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Social sciences
Were social relations and cultural norms radically influenced by PI?
Much of our evidence for this comes from the moralising travel
books of middle-class observers who saw 'beggar-weddings' as
grossly imprudent, women's independence as amoral, and
illegitimacy as a threat to society. It is notoriously
three
Conclusions
Recent research on rural manufacturing regions has highllighted the
danger of generalising about the impact of proto-industry upon
economic, social and cultural life. In each proto-industrial region the
pre-existing nature of agriculture, landholding and inheritance, the
organisational structure of production, together with the nature of
particular technologies, and their adaptation to divisions of labour
with households, were all of great importance. They influenced the
role of PI in the transition to more centralised and mechanised forms
of production and in the changes in demographic and social
behaviour. Clearly not all proto-industry was dynamic; only rarely
was it the overridingly dominant source of fundamental change in
early modern European economies. Neither can the phase of PI be so
clearly isolated from structures which preceded and followed it.
[2]
[3]
Industrialization
[5]
[6]
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