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WORK, LIFE & LEISURE GROWTH OF THE CITIES LONDON AND BOMBAY Prepared by: JEEVANSH ARORA

Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

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Page 1: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

WORK, LIFE & LEISURE

GROWTH OF THE CITIESLONDON

ANDBOMBAY

Prepared by:JEEVANSH ARORA

Page 2: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

CHARACTERISTICS OF CITIES

When an increase in food supply supported a wide range of non-food producers.

Centre of political power, administrative network, trade and industry, religious institutions and intellectual activity.

Supported various social groups such as artisans, merchants and priests.

Cities vary in size and complexity. Densely settled modern-day cities are called metropolis.

Page 3: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

INDUSTRIALIZATION AND THE RISE OF MODERN CITIES

London-A large city with huge population. Its population multiplied four folds in the 70 years i.e. 1810-1880 from 1 million to four million.

It attracted many people from country side.

Page 4: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

Major employment places in London were:-• London dockyard• Clothing and Footwear• Wood and Furniture• Metal and Engineering• Precision Products as Surgical instruments,

Objects of Precious Metals. By First World War, London began

manufacturing motor cars and electrical goods.

Page 5: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

IMPACT OF URBANISATION

LONDON GREW,CRIME FLOURISHED-20000 CRIMINALS IN 1870s

Criminals belonged to poor families. To discipline the population, authorities

imposed penalties and offered jobs to deserving poor.

Factories employed women; industrialization created unemployment and forced them to do domestic work,tailoring,washing and match-box making. A low-paid work.

Page 6: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

HOUSING AND TRANSPORT

Change in London city after the industrialization.

No housing arrangement by factory owners for migrant workers.

Houses-cheap and unsafe apartments. Poverty- both in countryside and in cities. Bad living conditions resulted in early

deaths-life expectancy to 29yrs and 55yrs for middle and rich class respectively.

Westminister Abbey

Lambeth Palace, residence Of Archbishop, Canterbury

Transport & Multistoreyed buildings

Page 7: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

Rich class demanded removal of slums Reasons:-

a serious threat to public health fire hazards due to poor housing Fear of social disorder So workers’ mass housing schemes

were planned to prevent the poor from turning rebellious.

CLEANING LONDON-VARIETY OF STEPS

• To decongest localities, green open spaces, less pollution-large blocks of apartments were built.

• Rent control was introduced to do with housing shortage.

• Congestion in cities required cleaning-green belt by architect and planner Ebenezer Howard ,later Raymond Unwin and Barry Parker designed the garden city of New Earswick

• Between 2WW(1919-1939) housing was taken care by the British state.

                                                 

Page 8: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

TRANSPORT IN THE CITY Underground

railways-first section of it was opened in 10Jan1863

By 1880 train service carried 40milllion passengers

Earlier people were afraid to travel

Better planned suburbs and a good railway network helped people to live outside central London and travel to work.

Page 9: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

INDUSTRIALISATION AND LIFE IN THE CITY

Ties between members loosened-institution of marriage was breaking down.

Women worked for wages, had some control over their lives.

Social reformers needed that the institution of family be saved.

The city encouraged INDIVIDUALISM among men and women and a freedom from collective values.

Men and women did not have equal access to urban lives.

Male-public space, women –domestic sphere.

Political movements-demanding vote for all adults and limited hours of work in factories.

Women joined mvmt; demanded right to vote or right to property to married women(1870).

The family now consisted of smaller units.

Page 10: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

LEISURE AND CONSUMPTION

Wealthy Britishers-cultural events, opera, theatre and classical music performance.

Working class- met in pubs to drink, exchange news and organize political actions.

Libraries, art galleries and museums were established to develop pride in the history and achievement of the British.

Lower classes preferred to go to music halls and cinema.

British industrial workers spend their holidays by the sea.

Charles Dickens

The Royal Albert Hall hosts the concerts.

Library

Page 11: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

POLITICS In 1886- the London poor exploded in a

riot demanding relief from poverty. In 1887-similar riot, which was brutally

suppressed by the police-BLOODY SUNDAY of Nov 1887.

In 1889-thousands of dockworkers went on strikes and marched through the city.

A large city population was both a threat and opportunity.

Page 12: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

THE CITY OF COLONIAL INDIA

The pace of urbanization was slow in colonial INDIA-11% lived in cities; esp. 3 Presidency cities- Bombay, Bengal and Madras.

These were multifunctional cities- major ports, warehouses, homes and offices, army, educational institutions, museums and libraries.

BOMBAY –premier city of INDIA.

Page 13: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

Islands of Bombay

Page 14: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

BOMBAY

In the 17th century, Bombay was a group of seven islands under Portuguese control.

In 1661 it was passed to British after the marriage of Britain’s King Charles II to the Portuguese princess as dowry.

At first, Bombay was major outlet for cotton textiles from Gujarat later large quantities of raw material as cotton and opium would pass.

Later a major administrative and industrial centre.

WORK

Bombay became a capital of Bombay presidency in 1819.

Growth of trade in cotton and opium, large communities of traders, bankers, artisans and shopkeepers came to settle.

Ist cotton mill estd in 1854 led to lot of people migrating to Bombay.

Women formed a part of mill workforce, but by 1930s women’s jobs were taken away by machines and men.

Bombay dominated sea trade of INDIA till 20th century.

Railways also encouraged an even higher scale of migration.

Page 15: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

HOUSING Bombay was an overcrowded city-9.4 sq

yds per person in 1840s as compared to 155 sq yds in London. London had 8 persons per house as compared to 20 in Bombay.

The Bombay fort area in 1800s was divided into native towns where Indians lived and a European or white section.

A European suburb and an industrial zone in the north and cantonment in the south of the Fort. A racial pattern also prevalent in other two Presidencies.

Chawl

Page 16: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

Water and housing problems were created due to expansion of the city.

Rich Parsis, Muslim and upper class traders and industrialists lived in bungalows and about 70% of the population lived in congested chawls .

Chawls were also place of exchange of news of jobs, strikes, riots and demonstrations.

Many people lived as tenants in one room(4 to 5).In the case of high rent people used to share homes.

People were living in a miserable conditions. The jobber in a mill used to be

neighborhood leader-who settled disputes, organized food supplies and credits.

Page 17: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

TRANSPORT

Trams, Tongas, Horse carts, buses, cars and trains.

Page 18: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

LAND RECLAMATION IN BOMBAY

The seven islands of Bombay were joined as one over a period of time

The Bombay Governor William Hornby approved the building of the great wall to prevent the flooding of low lying areas of Bombay.

Need for more space led to reclamation of land from sea.

In 1864, the Back Bay reclamation company reclaim the western foreshore from the tip of Malabar Hill to the end of Colaba.

With population increase more area was reclaimed from the sea.

To improve the situation of housing –The City of Bombay Improvement Trust was created in 1898 – clearing poorer homes out of the city centre.In 1918 Rent act was to keep reasonable rents.

Page 19: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

BOMBAY AS THE CITY OF DREAMS- CINEMA AND CULTURE

Bombay appears to many as a ‘mayapuri’-a city of dreams.

Many Bombay films deal with the arrival of new migrants and their problems and real life pressures.

Bombay film industry- Harishchandra S B shot a

scene of wrestling match in Bombay’s Hanging

gardens and it became India’s first movie.

1913-Raja Harishchandra by Dadasaheb Phalke.

Oldest Cinema Hall Regal Cinema Hall

Asiatic Society of Bombay

Page 20: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London
Page 21: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

1925- Bombay became first film capital.

Most of the people in the industry were migrants from Lahore, Calcutta, Madras and contributed to the national character of the industry.

Bombay film industry contributed in a big way to produce an image of the city as a mixture of dream, and reality,of slums and bungalows.

Page 22: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

CITIES AND CHALLENGES TO THE ENVIRONMENT

Harm to natural features due to more demand for space by factories, housing and other institutions.

Noise, air and water pollution. More use of coal in homes and industries-

black smoke created pollution hazards. Factory owners and steam engine owners

did not want to spend on technologies to improve their machines which produced a lot of smokes.

Page 23: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

Congested Living

PRESENT--AMCHI MUMBAI

Page 24: Work Life and Leisure - Bombay vs. London

Thank you!!!