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Small Books and Pleasant Histories

Small Books and Pleasant Histories

Popular Fiction and its Readership in Seventeenth-Century England

by Margaret Spufford
Paperback
Publication Date: 03/10/1985

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Attention has increasingly turned in recent years from the economic and agricultural framework of the life of the English villager in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries to his or her social and mental world. Margaret Spufford's interest in literacy, and particularly in the ability to read, which laid the villager open to all sorts of external influences other than those coming from the pulpit and the manor house, has led her in this book to examine both the spread of reading ability, and one of the principal forms of cheap print available in the late seventeenth century at a price within the reach of the day labourer. Many historians, notably history of education specialists, had not realized the extent of elementary schooling and the consequent existence of a mass readership and a popular literature created especially for it before the Charity School movement. This book provides them with a radical new emphasis. Dr Spufford's book examines the profits made by these publishers, the scale of their operations, and the way the 'small books' were distributed throughout the country. It also examines their content, and compares the English chapbooks with their French counterparts. By so doing, the author throws light on one of the influences at work on the seventeenth-century villager, and illuminates some of the concepts and imagery that formed the imaginative stock-in-trade of the man behind the plough.
ISBN:
9780521312189
9780521312189
Category:
British & Irish history
Format:
Paperback
Publication Date:
03-10-1985
Language:
English
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Country of origin:
United Kingdom
Pages:
300
Dimensions (mm):
216x140x24mm
Weight:
0.38kg

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