This book provides a comprehensive study of English police constables walking the beat in the early part of the twentieth century. Joanne Klein has mined a rich seam of archival evidence to present a fascinating insight into the everyday lives of these working-class men. The book explores how constables influenced law enforcement and looks at the changing nature of policing during this period.
'This book is greatly to be welcomed. Based on research from little-known provincial police archives, it provides a major addition to our knowledge of working-class life and work in general, and the life and work of the English police officer in particular. It explores police relations with the public, the varied arrangements of the Bobby's domestic life, and the vicissitudes of his working life from the moment that he first put his uniform on, to when he finally took it off as a result of death, dismissal, resignation or retirement. The book is just what good history should be - well-researched, persuasively argued and a pleasure to read.'
Professor Clive Emsley, Open University.
'This is an excellent book. It is well-written and extremely interesting, filling a gap in an historical literature, which is dominated by official and institutional perspectives, by illuminating the daily and working lives of constables.'
Professor Lucinda McCray Beier, Appalachian State University
Rezensionen / Stimmen
Invisible Men ably achieves its goal of exposing the experiences and concerns of police constables in this period. Anyone interested in the history of urban policing should consider it an attractive addition to their book shelves. * HSLC Transactions, Vol 159 * ...this is a lively and remarkable book. If one of Klein's goals was to break down the public's view of the police (perhaps held as much now as then) as a "monolithic entity" (110), she has succeeded magnificently by offering a complex portrait of how everyday policing was experienced as a mixture of boredom, excitement, violence, humor, tragedy, and, at times, absurdity. In a strikingly original chapter, the extensive institutional supervision to which constables were subjected even allows Klein to provide insight into police officers' domestic lives. An effective combination of detailed research and clear writing, Invisible Men joins the ranks of the must-read books about British policing. * Journal of British Studies * This book is greatly to be welcomed. Based on research from little-known provincial police archives, it provides a major addition to our knowledge of working-class life and work in general, and the life and work of the English police officer in particular. It explores police relations with the public, the varied arrangements of the Bobby's domestic life, and the vicissitudes of his working life from the moment that he first put his uniform on, to when he finally took it off as a result of death, dismissal, resignation or retirement. The book is just what good history should be - well-researched, persuasively argued and a pleasure to read.
Clive Emsley, Open University This is an excellent book. It is well-written and extremely interesting, filling a gap in an historical literature, which is dominated by official and institutional perspectives, by illuminating the daily and working lives of constables.
Lucinda McCray Beier, Appalachian State University * Appalachian State University *
Sprache
Verlagsort
Maße
Höhe: 234 mm
Breite: 156 mm
ISBN-13
978-1-84631-236-6 (9781846312366)
Copyright in bibliographic data and cover images is held by Nielsen Book Services Limited or by the publishers or by their respective licensors: all rights reserved.
Schweitzer Klassifikation
Joanne Klein is Associate Professor of History at Boise State University, Boise, Idaho.
Autor*in
History Department, Boise State University (United States)
Contents
List of Tables
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
Introduction: Invisible Men
1. Putting on the Uniform
2. Multifarious Duties
3. Discipline and Defaulters
4. Factions and Friendships
5. Police Unions and Federations
6. The Police and the Public: Animosity
7. The Police and the Public: Fraternizing
8. The Police and the Public: Women
9. Domestic Life
10. Taking off the Uniform
Conclusion
Appendix: Chief Constables in Birmingham, Liverpool, and Manchester, 1900-1939
Bibliography
Index