Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: shopkeeping as a historical problem
- 1 The business of shopkeeping in Milan, 1859–1915
- 2 The context of shopkeeping: trades and techniques
- 3 The economic geography of shopkeeping: the role of the dazio consumo
- 4 The esercenti enter the political arena
- 5 Constructing the esercenti movement, 1886–1890
- 6 The esercenti and the depression, 1890–1897
- 7 Shopkeepers, cooperatives and the politics of privilege
- 8 Milan and the national small-business movement, 1886–1898
- 9 The allargamento debate, 1895–1897
- 10 The end-of-century crisis and the enlargement of the dazio belt
- 11 Shopkeeping in the new century
- 12 Labour relations and class politics
- 13 The esercenti and the centre-left administration, 1900–1905
- 14 Shopkeepers and Socialists 1905–1922
- Conclusion: identity and autonomy
- Bibliography
- Index
- Past and Present Publications
11 - Shopkeeping in the new century
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 24 November 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of figures
- List of tables
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: shopkeeping as a historical problem
- 1 The business of shopkeeping in Milan, 1859–1915
- 2 The context of shopkeeping: trades and techniques
- 3 The economic geography of shopkeeping: the role of the dazio consumo
- 4 The esercenti enter the political arena
- 5 Constructing the esercenti movement, 1886–1890
- 6 The esercenti and the depression, 1890–1897
- 7 Shopkeepers, cooperatives and the politics of privilege
- 8 Milan and the national small-business movement, 1886–1898
- 9 The allargamento debate, 1895–1897
- 10 The end-of-century crisis and the enlargement of the dazio belt
- 11 Shopkeeping in the new century
- 12 Labour relations and class politics
- 13 The esercenti and the centre-left administration, 1900–1905
- 14 Shopkeepers and Socialists 1905–1922
- Conclusion: identity and autonomy
- Bibliography
- Index
- Past and Present Publications
Summary
Milan marked the turn of the century with a fundamental change in both its government and its character. In January 1900 Giuseppe Mussi was formally sworn in as the new mayor of the city at the head of a Radical administration supported by the Republicans and Socialists who had made up the Democratic alliance in the elections of December 1899. For the next four years this coalition presided over a city whose economic and physical growth turned it into a true city of industrial capitalism: a fact confirmed by the 1901 census which, for the first time, recorded over half the city's workforce as employed in manufacturing. Economic and political conflicts, particularly those involving class interests, assumed new forms: old alliances became outmoded.
The next three chapters examine the consequences of these developments for the esercenti movement. This chapter analyses changes in the business of shopkeeping at both local and national levels and their relation to the position of small business within the national political process. Chapter 12 focuses on the developments in labour relations within the esercenti sector, whilst chapter 13 analyses the effects of these changes on esercenti political activity in Milan in the first five years of a new century.
THE BUSINESS OF SHOPKEEPING
The early years of the new century were prosperous ones for the city of Milan and the retailers who served it.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- The Political Economy of Shopkeeping in Milan, 1886–1922 , pp. 207 - 224Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1993