In 1861, the great journalist and social advocate Henry Mayhew
published London Labour and the London Poor, an oral history of
those living and working on the streets of Victorian London.
Nothing on this scale had been attempted before. On the surface,
the streets of London in 1861 and in 2019 are entirely different
places. But dig just a little and the similarities are striking
and, in many cases, shocking. Taking Mayhew's book as inspiration,
Jennifer Kavanagh explores the changes and continuities by
collecting and mapping stories from today's London. Beggars, street
entertainers, stalls selling a variety of food, clothes,
second-hand goods, thieves and the sex trade are all still
predominant. The rise of the gig economy has brought a multitude of
drivers and cyclists, delivering and moving goods, transporting
meals and people, all organized through smart phones but using the
same streets as Mayhew's informants. The precarity faced by this
new workforce would also be familiar to the street-sellers of
Mayhew's day. In terms of resources, gone are the workhouses,
almshouses, paupers' lunatic asylums. Enter shelters, day centres,
hostels, and food banks. Let Me Take You By The Hand is an x-ray of
life on the streets today: the stories in their own words of those
who work and live in our capital.
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