Vol.
69, No. 5
Pamela SHARPE
The nineteenth-century businesswoman in the British Isles: work culture,
adaptation and the lace trade
This article looks at case studies of two British female lace 'entrepreneurs',
Charlotte Treadwin (1821~90) of Devon and Florence Vere O'Brien (1854~1936)
of Ireland. These women were typical of those responsible for the continuance
of hand-lace trades during the age of predominance of machine-made lace.
They were the reason for the endurance of female areas of manufacture
when much of the work of lace making seemed to be increasingly male
dominated. A close look at their working methods and work culture suggests
that they did not innovate as much as imitate. Their business activities
were partly for profit and partly philanthropic, but always with a strong
interest in maintaining traditional techniques.
Takahito MORI
The International Exhibition of Electric Technology in Frankfurt am
Main and its consequences: a study on the formation of the urban electric
power network in late nineteenth-century Germany
The aim of this article is to investigate the formation of the urban
electric power network in Frankfurt am Main during the transition from
the direct-current to the alternating-current system.
In the late nineteenth century,
the 'System Controversy', that is, the conflict between advocates of
the direct-current system and those of the alternating-current system,
was proving to be a significant socio-economic issue in western countries,
especially in large cities. This coincided with the deliberations of
the Frankfurt municipality over the introduction of electricity services
into the city, and the citizens decided to hold the International Exhibition
of Electric Technology there in 1891, in order to produce a decision
on the controversy. In the exhibition an experiment with long-distance
transmission of electricity using the three phase alternating-current
was carried out successfully and the controversy was terminated.
The outcome of the exhibition
determined which system would dominate, not only in Frankfurt but also
all over the world. Therefore Frankfurt can be defined as the pioneering
case of urban electrification using the alternating-current system,
as the result of a successful experiment. This article shows furthermore
that the municipality aimed throughout to control the electrical service
for the development of rational urban planning and social policy.
Kazunori MURAKOSHI
The correlation between mortality, size and density of population before
the mortality transition in Japan: an analysis of "Statistics of
birth, death, and marriage in cities for 1883"
The urban graveyard theory
has emphasized that mortality is higher in urban than in rural areas.
Osamu SAITO has reviewed research on urban and rural mortality in Tokugawa
Japan (1603~1867), and concludes that the theory has not yet been confirmed
but seems likely if Farr's law is applied. This conclusion seems to
have been widely accepted.
In this paper, I examine
whether it is reasonable to conclude that the urban mortality rate was
high by using the data for 1883 to test whether Farr's law holds in
the Japanese case. The results of my analysis are as follows:
First, the mortality rate
depends on the distributional patterns of population density in urban
areas. Second, Farr's law should only hold for areas with similar patterns.
Third, since urban areas in Japan showed various patterns at the beginning
of the Meiji period (1868~1912), only large areas with similar patterns
follow Farr's law. Fourth, the existence of the different patterns should
lead us to expect a wider range of urban mortality.
Seiichi EGUCHI
Patterns of food expenditure of farm households in prewar Japan: an
estimation based on farm household surveys
This paper is an attempt to
estimate income elasticities of food expenditure in the farm sector,
by using both original and published reports of farm household surveys
conducted in 1935 and 1936. The parameters thus estimated indicate,
first, that tenant farmers, who (according to my theory) represent the
average nationwide farming population, spent much of their income on
rice as their staple diet, and on fish and shellfish as subsidiary items.
These were foods that had been favored by many since the seventeenth
century, and the estimated results suggest that increased earnings were
used for the consumption of such traditional items. This pattern seems
to have continued until the mid-1950s since the elasticity estimates
are similar to those computed by Yasuhiko YUIZE for the 1955 survey.
Second, owner farmers, who were regarded as well above the average,
spent their income not only on other staple foods, but also on items
such as meat, dairy products and eggs. This pattern is similar to the
one found for 1960, as revealed by YUIZE's research. Third, the estimated
elasticities on Western-style 'luxury' foods, non-traditional seasonings
and fruits were greater than 1.0 for both the owner and tenant farmer
classes. This implies that westernization of food expenditure began
only on the periphery of food consumption.
Ken ISHIKAWA
The formation of commercial broadcasting networks in post-war Japan
After the Asia-Pacific war,
commercial broadcasting networks developed, formed from program-trading
relationships based on key stations. The purpose of this article is
to study the basic structure of program-trading relationships by focusing
on the selection of core stations which were the focus of program trading
by local stations. Decisions about program-trading relationships were
influenced by government regulation policies and other factors. These
factors prescribed decisions about the network relationships in each
allocated area. Meanwhile, the ability of key stations to produce programs
became the main factor in the progress of program trading outside network
relationships. However, this function of key stations only lasted until
the establishment of the basic structure of the program-trading relationships.
As we see in the example of the reorganization of program-trading relationships
in the Fukuoka-Kitakyushu area, with the gradual establishment of program
trading, the advantages and the disadvantages of the situation became
clear, leading to the next step in the development of program-trading
relationships.