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      The Memory of the People : Custom and Popular Senses of the Past in Early Modern England

      monograph
      Cambridge University Press

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          Abstract

          Did ordinary people in early modern England have any coherent sense of the past? Andy Wood's pioneering new book charts how popular memory generated a kind of usable past that legitimated claims to rights, space and resources. He explores the genesis of customary law in the medieval period; the politics of popular memory; local identities and traditions; gender and custom; literacy, orality and memory; landscape, space and memory; and the legacy of this cultural world for later generations. Drawing from a wealth of sources ranging from legal proceedings and parochial writings to proverbs and estate papers, he shows how custom formed a body of ideas built up generation after generation from localized patterns of cooperation and conflict. This is a unique account of the intimate connection between landscape, place and identity and of how the poorer and middling sort felt about the world around them.

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          Book
          9780521896108
          9780521720670
          9781139034739
          June 05 2014
          August 15 2013
          10.1017/CBO9781139034739
          8e04d0de-ee3b-4862-a41c-e7ddcd98083a
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