
The Extraordinary and the Everyday in Early Modern England
by Walker, Garthine; McShane-Jones, AngelaRent Textbook
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Summary
Author Biography
GARTHINE WALKER is Senior Lecturer in History at Cardiff University. Her publications include Crime, Gender and Social Order in Early Modern England (Cambridge University Press, 2003), Writing Early Modern History(Arnold, 2005), and essays and articles on topics ranging from abduction, rape and criminal households to the influence of psychoanalysis and modernisation theory in historical writing.
Table of Contents
List of Illustrations | p. vii |
Abbreviations and Conventions | p. viii |
Notes on the Contributors | p. ix |
Introduction: The Extraordinary and the Everyday in Early Modern England | p. 1 |
The Extraordinary in the Everyday | p. 7 |
Bodily Control and Social Unease: The Fart in Seventeenth-Century England | p. 9 |
The Ambition of a Young Baronet: Sir Thomas Isham of Lamport, 1657-1681 | p. 31 |
Robert Robertes and Little Cis: An Extraordinary Relationship | p. 48 |
Punishing Words: Insults and Injuries, 1525-1700 | p. 66 |
The World of Poor Robin's Intelligence: Comedy and Communication in Late Stuart London | p. 86 |
The Strangeness of the Familiar: Witchcraft and the Law in Early Modern England | p. 105 |
The Everyday in the Extraordinary | p. 125 |
Ann Jeffries and the Fairies: Folk Belief and the War on Scepticism in Later Stuart England | p. 127 |
Wyclif's Well: Lollardy, Landscape and Memory in Post-Reformation England | p. 142 |
'Boiled and Stewed with Roots and Herbs': Everyday Tales of Cannibalism in Early Modern Virginia | p. 161 |
Glimpses of the Obscure: The Witch Trials of the Channel Islands | p. 177 |
The Extraordinary Case of the Blood-Drinking and Flesh-Eating Cavaliers | p. 192 |
Mother Shipton and the Devil | p. 211 |
'Bleedinge Afreshe'? The Affray and Murder at Nantwich, 19 December 1572 | p. 224 |
Publications by Professor Bernard Capp, FBA | p. 246 |
Index | p. 251 |
Table of Contents provided by Ingram. All Rights Reserved. |
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