Re: Practices Encroaching on Modern Day
I wouldn't go so far as to say that. Those floor sweepings today are still re-used in many commercial products, so is sawdust, scrap metal, plastic, etc. Certainly material goods for members of the mid-19th century working class were recycled or repaired and things weren't necessarily as disposable as they are today, but there was an enormous amount of waste. I mean, we are talking about a capitalistic society right? Just talk to any Archaeologist who's dug period camp sites or privies, people threw away all sorts of things, including many items in perfectly good condition. Can you believe they just threw away those incredible cathedral pickle bottles once they were empty?:confused_
Mid-19th century Americans lived in a materialistic consumer society and waste was as much of a problem then as it is now, the big difference today is there's far more human beings on the planet contributing to the problem.
I think many of us get nostalgic about the past and like to think somehow that the world our mid-19th century ancestors lived in was free from many of the "sins" of our present world. Truth is, the more you study the past the more you realize that there's really nothing new under the sun. They struggled with many (most) of the same problems we do today.
Originally posted by Craig L Barry
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Mid-19th century Americans lived in a materialistic consumer society and waste was as much of a problem then as it is now, the big difference today is there's far more human beings on the planet contributing to the problem.
I think many of us get nostalgic about the past and like to think somehow that the world our mid-19th century ancestors lived in was free from many of the "sins" of our present world. Truth is, the more you study the past the more you realize that there's really nothing new under the sun. They struggled with many (most) of the same problems we do today.
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