Open accesscreativecommonsPeer reviewed/Research article
Published online: Dec 2023

Owen@250

Gregory Claeys

Vol 56 No 3, pp. 7-12

https://doi.org/10.61869/HTGP5068

How to cite this article: Claeys, G. (2023). Owen@250. Journal of Co-operative Studies, 56(3), 7-12. https://doi.org/10.61869/HTGP5068

Abstract

This essay takes the occasion of the 250th anniversary of Robert Owen’s birth in 1771 to review some scholarship in the field since the last major commemoration of the event in 1971. It then contends that were Owen alive today he would apply his leading ideas on the relationship between wants, needs, and social progress to the climate catastrophe looming over us now. As is evident in Owen’s works and in various communal experiments associated with the Owenite movement, a clear sense of exchanging unnecessary consumption with free time and creative activity emerged as early as the 1820s. Owen himself was particularly hostile to changes in fashion, insisting on a more stoic and Spartan approach to clothing in general. In the Owenite movement, however, a trend developed which was less puritanical in its approach to consumption, and argued instead that developments in production might well furnish the means to permit luxuries of various kinds to flourish in the new social system.


PDF

References

Bernhard (Duke of Saxe-Weimar Eisenach). (1828). Travels through North America, during the years 1825 and 1826, Vols 1 and 2. Carey, Lea & Carey.  https://doi.org/10.5962/bhl.title.158653

Bestor, A. E. (1950). Backwoods utopias: The sectarian and Owenite phases of communitarian socialism in America: 1663‑1829. University of Pennsylvania Press.

Butt, J. (1971). Introduction. In J. Butt (Ed.). Robert Owen: Prince of cotton spinners (pp. 9-19). David & Charles.

Claeys, G. (1987). Machinery, money and the millennium: From moral economy to socialism, 1815‑60. Princeton University Press.  https://doi.org/10.23943/princeton/9780691170046.001.0001

Claeys, G. (1993). General introduction. In Owen, R. (1993). Selected works of Robert Owen. Volume 2: The development of socialism (G. Claeys, Ed.).(pp. xv-lxii). Pickering and Chatto.

Claeys, G. (2022). Utopianism for a dying planet: Life after consumerism. Princeton University Press. 

Combe, A. (1825). The sphere of joint‑stock companies; Or the way to increase the value of land, capital, and labour; with an account of the establishment at Orbiston in Lanarkshire. G. Mudie & Co.

Harrison, J. F. C. (1969). Robert Owen and the Owenites in Britain and America: The quest for the New Moral World. Routledge & Kegan Paul.

Harrison, J. F. C. (1972). A new view of Mr Owen. In S. Pollard & J. Salt (Eds.), Robert Owen: Prophet of the poor (pp. 1-12). Macmillan.

Imlay, G. (1823). The new political economy of the honey bee. W. C. Featherstone.

Kolmerton, C. (1990). Women in utopia: The ideology of gender in the American Owenite communities. Indiana University Press.

[Newspaper article]. (1829, March). Associate.

[Newspaper article]. (1835, August 22). New Moral World, No 1, 43.

[Newspaper article]. (1836, September 17). New Moral World, No. 2, 99. 

[Newspaper article]. (1837, January 21). New Moral World.

[Newspaper article]. (1838a, April, 28). New Moral World

[Newspaper article]. (1838b, January 12). New Moral World

[Newspaper article]. (1827, March 14). Register, No. 29.

[Newspaper article]. (1842, June 1). Union, No. 3.

Owen, R. (1823). Report of the proceedings at the several public meetings held in Dublin. J. Carrick & Son.

Owen, R. (1991). Report to the County of Lanark. In G. Claeys, (Ed.). A new view of society and other writings. (pp. 250-308) Penguin. (Original work published 1820).

Owen, R. (1993a). Address delivered by Robert Owen (New Harmony Gazette, Vol. 2). In G. Claeys (Ed.). Selected works of Robert Owen. Volume 2: The development of socialism (pp. 259-324.). Pickering and Chatto. (Original work published 1827).

Owen, R. (1993b). Lectures on the Marriages of the Priesthood of the Old Immoral World. In G. Claeys (Ed.). Selected works of Robert Owen. Volume 2: The development of socialism (pp. 259-324.). Pickering and Chatto. (Original work published 1835).

Owen, R. (1993c). Robert Owen’s Reply to the Question, ‘What would you do if you were Prime Minister of England?’. In G. Claeys (Ed.). Selected works of Robert Owen. Volume 2: The development of socialism (pp. 213-223). Pickering and Chatto. (Original work published circa 1832).

Owen, R. (1993d). Selected works of Robert Owen. Volume 1. (G. Claeys, Ed.). Pickering and Chatto. (Original manuscripts published in 1858).

Owen, R. (1993e). The social system (New Harmony Gazette, Vol. 2). In G. Claeys (Ed.). Selected works of Robert Owen. Volume 2: The development of socialism (pp. 56-104.). Pickering and Chatto. (Original work published 1827).

Sutton, R. P. (2004). Communal utopias and the American experience: Secular communities, 1824‑2000. Praeger.

Thompson, N. (1988). The market and its critics: Socialist political economy in nineteenth‑century Britain. Routledge.

Thompson, N. (2011). Owen and the Owenites: Consumer and consumption in the new moral world. In N. Thompson & C. Williams (Eds.), Robert Owen and his legacy (pp. 113-128). University of Wales Press.

Thompson, W. (1824). An inquiry into the principles of the distribution of wealth. Longman, Hurst, Rees, Orme, Brown, & Green.

UK Society for Co-operative Studies is registered in England and Wales as a charitable incorporated organisation Number 1175295. Our registered office is Holyoake House, Hanover Street, Manchester, M60 0AS.
Log in | Powered by White Fuse