What a social agency’s records reveal about occupational careers in the city. (VI, 4; VII, 4, 5; VIII, 1.)
Veblen, Thorstein. The Instinct of Workmanship, and the State of the Industrial Arts (New York, 1914).
Showing the development of the specialization of labor and its effect on human behavior. (IX, 2.)
Werthauer, Johannes. Berliner Schwindel, Vol. XXI in “Grossstadt Dokumente” (Berlin, 1905).
Showing the extent to which fraud has become a technical profession. (VII, 5; IX, 2, 4.)
Weidner, Albert. Aus den Tiefen der Berliner Arbeiterbewegung, Vol. IX, in “Grossstadt Dokumente” (Berlin, 1905).
The significance of the labor movement in the large city. (V, 1, 4; VII, 5; IX, 2, 3, 4.)
2. There is a city mentality which is clearly differentiated from the rural mind. The city man thinks in mechanistic terms, in rational terms, while the rustic thinks in naturalistic, magical terms. Not only does this difference exist between city and country, it exists also between city and city, and between one area of the city and another. Each city and each part of the city furnishes a distinct social world to its inhabitants, which they incorporate in their personality whether they will or no.
Carleton, Will. City Ballads, City Festivals, and City Legends (London, 1907). (X, 2.)
Grant, James. Lights and Shadows of London Life (London, 1842).