两次世界大战之间英国的工厂旅游:社会民主主义大规模生产的壮观建设。

Richard Hornsey
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引用次数: 0

摘要

在20世纪二三十年代,英国的大规模制造商向成千上万的普通消费者开放了他们的工厂。随着品牌家居用品市场的竞争日益激烈,参观者可以在一天的时间里享受机械奇迹和信息娱乐,以换取对杂货店的忠诚。这样的旅行也是对激进消费主义运动和大众对垄断联合企业崛起的不满的重要回应。有组织的工厂参观努力将资本主义大规模生产作为社会民主进步的一种形式呈现出来,将大规模生产和大规模消费定位为一个更加公平、富足和民主的社会的双引擎。本文首次对二战期间的大规模工厂旅游进行了系统的批判性研究,并探索了四个最受欢迎的目的地:阳光港的杠杆兄弟;伯恩维尔的吉百利;约克郡的朗特里;和在萨默代尔的弗莱。它解构了将单调的工厂工作转变为壮观快乐之源的尝试中的矛盾,并考察了用于构建霸权游客体验的常用技术。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Factory tourism in inter-war Britain: the spectacular construction of social-democratic mass production.

In the 1920s and 1930s, British mass-manufacturers opened their factories to hundreds of thousands of ordinary consumers. As the market for branded household commodities became increasingly competitive, visitors were offered a day out of mechanical wonderment and informative entertainment in hopeful exchange for loyalty at the grocers. Such tours were also a significant riposte to the radical consumerist movement and popular discomfort at the rise of monopoly combines. Organized factory tours worked hard to present capitalist mass production as a form of social-democratic progress, positioning mass production and mass consumption as the twin engines of a more equitable, abundant, and democratic society. This essay provides the first systematic critical engagement with inter-war mass factory tourism and explores four of the most popular destinations: Lever Brothers at Port Sunlight; Cadbury at Bournville; Rowntree at York; and Fry at Somerdale. It unpicks the contradictions within the attempt to turn monotonous factory work into a source of spectacular pleasure and examines the common techniques used to construct hegemonic visitor experiences.

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