Eighteenth-century popular culture : a selection
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書誌事項
Eighteenth-century popular culture : a selection
Oxford University Press, 2000
- : pbk
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注記
Includes bibliographical references and index
内容説明・目次
内容説明
This collection makes available what was once popular but has long been buried. During the eighteenth century, popular culture assumed a peculiar importance. In the early part of the century, high and low cultures often collided. Later in the century, politeness more and more required the distancing of genteel from vulgar amusements. This carefully annotated selection rediscovers some of the energies of the low and the vulgar in the period. It examines particular
themes (crime, religious enthusiasm, popular politics, for example) by telling particular stories (the career of a notorious criminal, the exploits of a religious sect, John Wilkes and the crowd). It also illustrates how the very idea of popular culture was formed in the period, providing examples of
the ways in which it was discussed both by those who were fearful of it and those who were fascinated by it.
目次
- Introduction
- Using the Selection
- 1. Eighteenth-Century Views of Popular Culture
- 2. Religious enthusiasm: the French Prophets, 1707-1711
- 3. Fairgoers and Reformers: the Struggle for Bartholomew Fair
- 4. Almanacs: Astrology and Popular Protestantism
- 5. Crime: the Fortunes of Jack Sheppard
- 6. Custom and the Calendar: the Gregorian Reform and its Opponents
- 7. Popular Politics: John Wilkes and the Crowd, 1768-70
- 8. Popular Perceptions of Empire: Native Americans in Britain in the 1760s
- Index
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