Sociology, asked by sahapriya69361, 9 months ago

what contexts allowed for the change in great britain's social class dynamics?

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Answered by Anonymous
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Answered by Sreejanandakumarsl
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Answer:

The population increased significantly in the 13th century, peaking at nearly five million people. With the high farming system, great landlords benefited, but small peasant holdings shrank on average without a corresponding increase in production. The fate of the knightly class has been a topic of discussion: some historians have argued that smaller landowners experienced a loss in income and population.

Explanation :

  • In Britain, there is still a significant class division.
  • Public life is dominated by the same universities, churches, and schools, yet despite the appearance of inertia, changes are taking place.
  • There is no doubt that occupation no longer neatly categorises social class.
  • Even those with the same income can access a vast range of services.
  • Class is no longer just a vertical ranking based on resources and a manufacturing system.
  • You can maintain numerous class IDs.
  • What class, for instance, consists of a university graduate who works in a call centre, lives with friends, and later in middle age, expects some "support" from their parents with a mortgage?
  • Although our social classes are now frequently viewed as examples of free-market capitalism, the market does not play a significant role in their definition.
  • Bosses and employees, slaves and masters, and markets have all been around for centuries.
  • Industrial capitalism was novel, and its technological innovations were what made it such.
  • We would not have been able to drastically change our civilizations and reshape our globe in such a short period of time without the invention of machinery to harness the power of carbon, initially through coal. That rearranging is still going on.

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