Semi-detached Britain? Social networks in the suburban fringe of Leicester and Loughborough, 1950-2005
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Abstract
Once regarded as a nation central to the development of civil society, associational
activity in contemporary Britain is perceived by some authors as fragile. Whereas the urban
leadership provided by the middle classes was crucial to the trajectory and character of
towns and cities all over Britain in the nineteenth century, it has been claimed that their
relocation to suburbia has become synonymous with detachment, disinterest and the decline
of the associational sphere. Depicted in literary and historical accounts, as well as in the
popular media, as pursuing a suburban lifestyle that was both monotonous and disengaged,
the middle classes of the twentieth century were assumed to have relinquished the
management of a multitude of municipal and voluntary functions that defined an urban
place. Yet such accounts stereotyped middle-class lifestyles, oversimplifying their
relationship with the city, and prompting a ‘new wave’ of suburban research in America that
has offered a revisionism that stresses diversity and challenges prevailing assumptions
regarding middle-class behaviour. Assumptions of suburban detachment are contested in
the research that underpins this study.
The thesis ‘Semi-Detached Britain? Social networks in the suburban fringe of
Leicester and Loughborough, 1950-2005’ provides a detailed analysis of social and cultural
networks and reviews the consequences of relocation on civic engagement since 1950.
Geographically the middle classes may have distanced their home lives from the urban
centre, but through an examination of their participation in the associational sphere of clubs
and societies it is evident that suburban living was not synonymous with disinterest and
detachment. Furthermore, analysis of cultural changes post 1950, including the issue of
conservation, the shifting nature of gender relations, and the process of racial assimilation,
reveal how voluntary organisations, and their middle-class membership, continued to shape
the physical, spatial and cultural landscape of modern Britain. Through the intricate
networks of power developed in local clubs and societies, the middle-classes found a
continuing utility in the transference of knowledge and expertise, often working as mediator
between the citizen and the state. Far from being disconnected, the new ‘suburbans’ were
‘semi-detached’, demonstrating a vigorous and ongoing commitment to the public sphere
that contributed to the stock of social and civic capital in both town and city. In this regard
the thesis provides a revisionism concerning the middle classes, suburbanisation, and the
construction of civil society in the modern era.
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