ABSTRACT

Through a series of sharply focused studies spanning three centuries, David Rollison explores the rise of capitalist manufacturing in the English countryside and the revolution in consciousness that accompanied it. Combining the empiricism of English historiography with the rationalism of Annales, and drawing on ideas from a wide range of disciplines, he argues that the explosive implications of the rise of rural industry created new social formations and altered the communal, cultural and social contexts of peoples lives. Using localized case studies of families and individuals the book starts with significant detail and moves out to build up a subtle and innovative view of English cultural identities in the early modern period.

chapter |18 pages

INTRODUCTION

Country capitalism

part |2 pages

Part I CRADLES OF CHANGE

chapter 1|24 pages

CRADLES OF CHANGE

The manufacturing districts

chapter 2|20 pages

TRAILS OF PROGRESS

The reorientation and intensification of traffic, 1600–1800

part |2 pages

Part II NEIGHBOURHOOD TO NATION

chapter 3|16 pages

PROVERBIAL CULTURE

chapter 4|12 pages

TYNDALE AND ALL HIS SECT

chapter 5|24 pages

NEIGHBOURHOOD TO NATION

The Trotmans: A middle-rank kin-coalition, 1512–1712

part |2 pages

Part III TWO REVOLUTIONARIES

chapter 6|40 pages

‘SMALL THINGES AND GRANDE DESIGNES’

A revolutionary’s history of the English Revolution

chapter 7|32 pages

CUNNING MAN AND QUAKER

John Roberts of Siddington St Mary

part |2 pages

Part IV THE MULTITUDES AROUND US

chapter 8|20 pages

COMMUNITY AT THE BORDERS

chapter 9|28 pages

‘A CONCATENATION OF VICIOUS HABITS’

A season of riots and a public discussion, 1738–41

chapter 10|18 pages

LASTING PREJUDICES

Languages of Social Discrimination