Wordsworth - Poet of the People
How did two great thinkers - William Wordsworth the Romantic poet and Adam Smith the Enlightenment economist - respond to the Industrial Revolution? Jenny Uglow finds out.
On the 250th anniversary of Wordsworth's birth Jenny Uglow presented a programme looking at the poet's response to the Industrial Revolution and contrasting his view with that of Adam Smith, the great Enlightenment moral philosopher and 'father of modern economics'.
Here's another chance to hear that programme.
Jenny visits the Lake District and finds that far from hills and dales empty except for sheep, the countryside that Wordsworth knew was rapidly industrialising with mills and canals, quarries and ironworks. But while Wordsworth lamented the end of small-farm self sufficiency, an end to what he saw as the dignity of work on the land as factories took hold, Adam Smith saw the potential of industrialisation. We visit his homes in Kirkcaldy and Edinburgh to hear about his hopes of offering prosperity and 'betterment' to every level of society as the new economic order evolved.
The two men's world views - of what constitutes a good society, of how to take care of the poor, the place of morality in commerce - actually inform debates that are relevant now. And counterintuitively these views were not as polarised as they first might seem.
The backdrop is Wordsworth's Grasmere, where Dove Cottage and the attached museum and archive are enjoying a major upgrade, and Panmure House in Edinburgh - Adam Smith's final home - which has been restored as a centre to honour his legacy.
Produced by Susan Marling
A Just Radio production for BBC Radio 3
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- Sun 5 Apr 202018:45BBC Radio 3
- Fri 6 Aug 202122:00BBC Radio 3
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