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Book Cover
E-book
Author Wood, Andy

Title The politics of social conflict : the Peak Country, 1520-1770 / Andy Wood
Published New York : Cambridge University Press, 1999

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Description 1 online resource (xvi, 354 pages) : illustrations, maps
Series Cambridge studies in early modern British history
Cambridge studies in early modern British history
Contents Introduction: 'Terms we did not understand': landscape, place and perceptions -- 1. Social relations and popular culture in early modern England -- pt. I. The structures of inequality -- 2. Economy and society in the Peak Country, c. 1520-1570 -- 3. Industrialization and social change, c. 1570-1660 -- 4. The Peak Country as an industrial region, c. 1660-1770 -- 5. Social conflict and early capitalism -- pt. II. The conditions of community -- 6. 'The memory of the people': custom, law and popular culture -- 7. The politics of custom -- 8. Community, identity and culture -- pt. III. The politics of social conflict -- 9. 'Pyllage uppon the poore mynorz': sources of social conflict, 1500-1600 -- 10. 'All is hurly burly here': local histories of social conflict, 1600-1640 -- 11. The Peak in context: riot and popular politics in early Stuart England -- 12. 'Prerogative hath many proctors': the English Revolution and the plebeian politics of the Peak, 1640-1660 -- 13. The experience of defeat? The defence of custom, 1660-1770 -- 14. The making of the English working class in the Derbyshire Peak Country
Summary This book provides a new approach to the history of social conflict, popular politics and plebeian culture in the early modern period. Based on a close study of the Peak Country of Derbyshire c. 1520-1770, it has implications for understandings of class identity, popular culture, riot, custom and social relations. A detailed reconstruction of economic and social change within the region is followed by an in-depth examination of the changing cultural meanings of custom, gender, locality, skill, literacy, orality and magic. The local history of social conflict sheds new light upon the nature of political engagement and the origins of early capitalism. Important insights are offered into early modern social and gender identities, civil war allegiances, the appeal of radical ideas and the making of the English working class. Above all, the book challenges the claim that early modern England was a hierarchical, 'pre-class' society. Second Prize in the Whitfield Prize 1999
Bibliography Includes bibliographical references and index
Notes Print version record
Subject Social conflict -- England -- Derbyshire -- History
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Anthropology -- Cultural.
POLITICAL SCIENCE -- Public Policy -- Cultural Policy.
SOCIAL SCIENCE -- Popular Culture.
Social conflict
Social conditions
Arbeidersklasse.
Culturele identiteit.
Sociale conflicten.
SUBJECT Derbyshire (England) -- Social conditions
Subject England -- Derbyshire
Derbyshire.
Genre/Form Electronic books
History
Form Electronic book
ISBN 0511006683
9780511006685
0511038232
9780511038235
0511116381
9780511116384
9780521561143
0521561140
1280161639
9781280161636
9780511496134
0511496133
9786610161638
6610161631