How industrial revolution affected life in Britain — Cambridge IELTS 15 Academic 2020 TEST 4 — IELTS Test

Cambridge IELTS 15 Academic 2020 TEST 4

How industrial revolution affected life in Britain

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(0:00) Part 4. You will hear a history student giving part of a presentation (0:06) about changes in British society in the 19th century. (0:11) First, you have some time to look at questions 31 to 40. (1:07) Now listen carefully and answer questions 31 to 40.
(1:15) Hi everyone. In this session I'll be presenting my research about the social history of Britain (1:21) during the Industrial Revolution. I particularly looked at how ordinary lives were affected by (1:28) changes that happened at that time.
This was a time that saw the beginning of a new phenomenon,
(1:34) consumerism, where buying and selling goods became a major part of ordinary people's lives. (1:42) In fact, it was in the 19th century that the quantity and quality of people's possessions (1:47) was used as an indication of the wealth of the country. Before this, the vast majority of people (1:54) had very few possessions, but all that was changed by the Industrial Revolution.
(2:01) This was the era from the mid-18th to the late 19th century, when improvements in how goods (2:07) were made as well as in technology triggered massive social changes that transformed life (2:13) for just about everybody in several key areas. First, let's look at manufacturing. (2:21) When it comes to manufacturing, we tend to think of the Industrial Revolution (2:25) in images of steam engines and coal, and it's true that the Industrial Revolution (2:31) couldn't have taken place at all if it weren't for these new sources of power.
(2:37) They marked an important shift away from the traditional water mills and windmills (2:42) that had dominated before this. The most advanced industry for much of the 19th century was textiles. (2:50) This meant that fashionable fabrics and lace and ribbons were made available to everyone.
(2:57) Before the Industrial Revolution, most people made goods to sell in small workshops, (3:03) often in their own homes, but enormous new machines were now being created (3:09) that could produce the goods faster and on a larger scale, and these required a lot more space. (3:17) So large factories were built, replacing the workshops and forcing workers to travel to work. (3:24) In fact, large numbers of people migrated from villages into towns as a result.
(3:35) As well as manufacturing, there were new technologies in transport, (3:39) contributing to the growth of consumerism. The horse-drawn stagecoaches and carts of the 18th (3:46) century, which carried very few people and goods and travelled slowly along poorly surfaced roads, (3:53) were gradually replaced by the numerous canals that were constructed. (3:57) These were particularly important for the transportation of goods.
(4:02) The canals gradually fell out of use, though, as railways were developed, (4:07) becoming the main way of moving goods and people from one end of the country to the other. (4:14) And the goods they moved weren't just coal, iron, clothes and so on. Significantly, (4:20) they included newspapers, which meant that thousands of people were not only more (4:25) knowledgeable about what was going on in the country, but could also read about what was (4:31) available in the shops.
And that encouraged them to buy more.
(4:36) So faster forms of transport resulted in distribution becoming far more efficient. (4:43) Goods could now be sold all over the country, instead of just in the local market.
(4:50) The third main area that saw changes that contributed to consumerism was retailing. (4:56) The number and quality of shops grew rapidly, and in particular, small shops suffered as customers (5:04) flocked to the growing number of department stores, a form of retailing that was new in the 19th (5:10) century. The entrepreneurs who opened these found new ways to stock them with goods and to attract (5:18) customers.
For instance, improved lighting inside greatly increased the visibility of the goods
(5:27) for sale. Another development that made goods more visible from outside resulted from the use (5:34) of plate glass, which made it possible for windows to be much larger than previously. (5:41) New ways of promoting goods were introduced too.
Previously, the focus had been on informing
(5:48) potential customers about the availability of goods. Now, there was an explosion in advertising (5:55) trying to persuade people to go shopping. Flanders claims that one of the great effects (6:01) of the Industrial Revolution was that it created choice.
All sorts of things that had previously
(6:08) been luxuries, from sugar to cutlery, became conveniences, and before long they turned into (6:16) necessities. Life without sugar or cutlery was unimaginable, rather like mobile phones these days. (6:27) That is the end of part four.
You now have one minute to check your answers to part four.

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