Front cover image for Communities in early modern England : networks, place, rhetoric

Communities in early modern England : networks, place, rhetoric

How were cultural, political and social identities formed in the early modern period? This book looks at community and networks, the importance of place and the value of rhetoric in generating "community".
Print Book, English, 2000
Manchester University Press, Manchester, 2000
History
256 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm
9780719054761, 9780719054778, 0719054761, 071905477X
319709626
List of tables and illustrationsList of contributorsPrefaceList of abbreviations1. P. J. Withington and Alexandra Shepard – Introduction: communities in early modern EnglandPart One: Networks2. Jason Scott-Warren – Reconstructing manuscript networks: the textual transactions of Sir Stepehn Powle3. Margaret Pelling – Defensive tactics: networking by female medical practitioners in early modern London4. Margaret Sena – William Blundell and the networks of Catholic dissent in post-Reformation England5. Ian Archer – Social networks in Restoration London: the evidence from Samuel Pepys’ diaryPart Two: Place6. Steven Hindle – A sense of place? Becoming and belonging in the rural parish, 1550-16507. Paul Griffiths – Overlapping circles: imagining criminal communities in London, 1545-16458. P. J. Withington – Citizens, community and political culture in Restoration England9. Craig Muldrew – From a ‘light cloak’ to the ‘iron cage’: an essay on historical changes in the relationship between community and individualismPart Three: Rhetoric10. Cathy Shrank – Rhetorical constructions of a national community: the role of the King’s English in mid-Tudor writing11. Geoff Baldwin – The ‘public’ as a rhetorical community in early modern England12. Alexandra Shepard – Contesting communities?: ‘town’ and ‘gown’ in Cambridge, c.1560-164013. Natasha Glaisyer – Readers, correspondents and communities: John Houghton’s ‘A collection for improvement of husbandrry and trade’ (1692-1703)Bibliography -- .