Archive for June, 2009

E. P. Thompson – Customs in Common

Sunday, June 14th, 2009
E. P. Thompson - Customs in Common E. P. ThompsonCustoms in Common
[Merlin 1991]

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Customs in Common is a companion volume to The Making of the English Working Class. It explores the ebullient and contradictory plebian culture which preceded the formation of the working class institutions and consciousness, and its customs and practices, some of which survived well into Victorian times.

Although rooted in English evidence from the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries, these studies have wide-ranging reference and significance. The notion of 'the moral economy', which Tompson first developed to analyse the motives of food rioters, has subsequently become influential in many fields, including peasant studies. Thompson takes up the discussion again, replies to some criticisms and extensions of his work and welcomes others. He shows how careful attention to fragmentary evidence enables one to decode some practices, such as the sale of wives, or shaming rituals like rough music, with their forgotten vocabulary of symbolism. In examining the rigorous presence of women in food riots from the sixteenth century onwards, he suggests the light which this throws on gender relations.

In a study which confronts the triumphalism of much recent history of the agricultural revolution, Thompson re-examines the ways in which villagers lost their common-rights in the face of the law's hostility to custom. Some historians have written of the riotous plebs of eighteenth century England and Wales as if they were only a problem for magistrates and governments to handle. For Thompson, the rulers, landowners and governments were a problem for the people to handle. Perhaps this is why the pages come alive for us. Using an unusually wide range of sources—legal records, folklore collections, academic studies, local record office collections, contemporary newspapers, pamphlets, sermons and poems—Thompson has once again given voices to the silent majority.

Contents

Preface and Acknowledgements

I Introduction: Custom and Culture
II The Patricians and the Plebs
III Custom, Law and Common Right
IV The Moral Economy of the English Crowd in the Eighteenth Century
V The Moral Economy Reviewed
VI Time, Work-Discipline and Industrial Capitalism
VII The Sale of Wives
VIII Rough Music

Index
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John E. Archer – Social Unrest and Popular Protest in England 1780-1840

Saturday, June 6th, 2009
Click for larger version John E. ArcherSocial Unrest and Popular Protest in England 1780-1840
[Cambridge University Press 2000]

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Historians of protest have attempted to unlock the meaning of social unrest, studying collective violence and action as a barometer of social and political stability. John E. Archer examines the diversity of protest from 1780 to 1840 and how it altered during this period of extreme change. This textbook covers all forms of protest, including the Gordon Riots of 1780, food riots, Luddism, the radical political reform movement and Peterloo in 1819, and the less well researched anti-enclosure, anti-New Poor Law riots, arson and other forms of 'terroristic' action, up to the advent of Chartism in the 1830s. Archer evaluates the problematic nature of source materials and conflicting interpretations leading to debate, and reviews the historiography and methodology of protest studies.

The Burning & Plundering of Newgate & Setting the Felons at Liberty by the Mob
'The Burning & Plundering of Newgate & Setting the Felons at Liberty by the Mob'

Contents

Preface

1. Introduction: Historiography, sources and methods
Sources, problems and methodologies
2. Agricultural Protest
Enclosures and lost rights
Collective disturbances
Post-1830
Anti-New Poor Law protest
3. Food Riots
Timing and location of food riots
The food rioter
The form of the food riot
The 'moral economy'
4. Industrial Protest
Pre-Luddite protest
Luddism
5. Political Protest
The reactionary crowd
Reformist and insurrectionary traditions
The reform movement
Post-1832
6. Policing Protest
Law Enforcement
The 'new' police
The law
7. A Revolutionary Challenge?
8. Conclusion

Bibliography
Index
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