The Road To Wigan Pier

The Road to Wigan Pier was written by George Orwell and published in 1937. It is a sociological look at living conditions in the industrial north of England before World War II. The name of the book comes from a music hall routine by a British comedian. Although a pier is a structure built out into the water from the shore, in Britain the term has the connotation of a seaside holiday, something that it lacks in the US, where "boardwalk" takes this connotation. Wigan was a small, grimy coal town on a river which was accessed by some boats via an offloading structure, though it primarily used land transport. Hence the music-hall joke was that a coal town had its own seaside resort, and Orwell's selection of the phrase in his title was that socialism could improve work life to an unprecedented degree, even in a coal town.

See Also

External links

Road to Wigan Pier Road to Wigan Pier

 

<< PreviousWord BrowserNext >>
bahram iii of persia
agathias
agosta 90b class submarine
hundred flowers campaign
ecan f17 mod 2 torpedo
eurocontrol
launch capsule
submarine launched missile
bahram iv of persia
torpedo tube
bahram v of persia
university of ottawa
shapur i of persia
shapur ii of persia
shapur iii of persia
pogrom
ardashir iii of persia
ardashir ii of persia
giorgione
reactance
capacitance
gordian iii
gordian i
gordian ii
anti ship missile
narseh of persia
faith of our fathers
snake handling
battle of nrdlingen (1645)
fertility rite
bertelsmann ag
joannes zonaras
bad brains
rudolf virchow
web services description language
bjarni herjlfsson
francesco redi
timpani
ecbatana
import substitution
infantilism
fernando valenzuela
claire chennault
the electric spanking of war babies