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industrialism

Definition of Industrialism

(noun) A socioeconomic system based on the development of large-scale industries, particularly inexpensive manufactured goods and mechanized food production concentrated in urban areas.

Industrialism Pronunciation

Pronunciation Usage Guide

Syllabification: in·dus·tri·al·ism

Audio Pronunciation

– American English
– British English

Phonetic Spelling

  • American English – /in-dUH-stree-uh-liz-uhm/
  • British English – /in-dUH-striuh-li-zuhm/

International Phonetic Alphabet

  • American English – /ᵻnˈdəstriəˌlɪz(ə)m/
  • British English – /ɪnˈdʌstrɪəlɪz(ə)m/

Usage Notes

Related Quotation

  • Capitalist production requires exchange relations, commodities, and money, but its differentia specified is the purchase and sale of labour power. For this purpose, three basic conditions must become generalized throughout society. First, workers are separated from the means with which production is carried on, and can gain access to them only by selling their labour power to others. Second, workers are freed of legal constraints, such as serfdom or slavery, that prevent them from disposing of their own labour power. Third, the purpose of the employment of the worker becomes the expansion of a unit of capital belonging to the employer, who is thus functioning as a capitalist. The labour process therefore begins with a contract or agreement governing the conditions of the sale of labour power by the worker and its purchase by the employer. It is important to take note of the historical character of this phenomenon. While the purchase and sale of labour power has existed from antiquity, a substantial class of wage-workers did not begin to form in Europe until the fourteenth century, and did not become numerically significant until the rise of industrial capitalism (that is the production of commodities on a capitalist basis, as against mercantile capitalism, which merely exchanged the surplus products of prior forms of production) in the eighteenth century” (Braverman 1974:52).

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Additional Information

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Reference

Braverman, Harry. 1974. Labor and Monopoly Capital: The Degradation of Work in the Twentieth Century. New York: Monthly Review Press.

Works Consulted

Macionis, John. 2012. Sociology. 14th ed. Boston: Pearson.

Macionis, John, and Kenneth Plummer. 2012. Sociology: A Global Introduction. 4th ed. Harlow, England: Pearson Education.

Wikipedia contributors. (N.d.) Wiktionary, The Free Dictionary. Wikimedia Foundation. (http://en.wiktionary.org).

Cite the Definition of Industrialism

ASA – American Sociological Association (5th edition)

Bell, Kenton, ed. 2013. “industrialism.” In Open Education Sociology Dictionary. Retrieved March 29, 2024 (https://sociologydictionary.org/industrialism/).

APA – American Psychological Association (6th edition)

industrialism. (2013). In K. Bell (Ed.), Open education sociology dictionary. Retrieved from https://sociologydictionary.org/industrialism/

Chicago/Turabian: Author-Date – Chicago Manual of Style (16th edition)

Bell, Kenton, ed. 2013. “industrialism.” In Open Education Sociology Dictionary. Accessed March 29, 2024. https://sociologydictionary.org/industrialism/.

MLA – Modern Language Association (7th edition)

“industrialism.” Open Education Sociology Dictionary. Ed. Kenton Bell. 2013. Web. 29 Mar. 2024. <https://sociologydictionary.org/industrialism/>.