From the Margins to the Centre in Seventeenth-Century England
Essays in Honour of Bernard Capp

Edited by Angela McShane,Tim Reinke-Williams

ISBN13: 9781837651665

Imprint: Boydell & Brewer

Publisher: Boydell & Brewer Ltd

Format: Hardback

Published: 20/05/2025

Availability: Not yet available

Description
Collection of essays showcasing how one of the greatest historians of seventeenth-century England has shaped and continues to influence the direction of studies in early modern society, culture and belief. This collection of essays showcases how, over an illustrious career spanning more than fifty years, Professor Bernard Capp FBA has shaped and continues to influence the direction of studies in early modern English social and cultural history. Initially influenced by the historiographical agendas set in the 1960s by Christopher Hill and Sir Keith Thomas, over the last five decades Capp has produced important studies of religious radicalism, print culture, gender and sibling relations, the culture wars of the 1650s and the maritime world. Collectively this body of work enabled him not only to recover the experiences of the marginalised, but also to highlight the importance of topics previously deemed (at best) of marginal interest to historians of seventeenth-century England. The contributions to this volume, produced by a new generation of historians whose doctoral work Capp supervised and examined, are similarly wide-ranging and innovative. Engaging in dialogue with Capp's work, as well as those he has been in dialogue with himself, the authors provide novel studies of hermits, sailors and surgeons, as well as shedding fresh light on topics such as the politics of the parish, the lives of plebeian women, men's emotions, and the cultural worlds of 'Jane' Shore and John Taylor the Water-Poet. Like Capp, the authors use evidence from legal records, life-writings and cheap printed texts to recover marginalised voices and reconstruct the everyday lives of those overlooked and misunderstood by their contemporaries and by historians. By doing so, they demonstrate how one of the greatest historians of seventeenth-century England continues to inspire the production of innovative studies of early modern society, culture and belief. CONTRIBUTORS: Richard Blakemore, Heather Falvey, Jasmine Kilburn-Toppin, Anu Korhonen, Peter Marshall, Angela McShane, Elaine Murphy, Naomi Pullin, Tim Reinke-Williams
Introduction: Bernard Capp and the Cultural History of Early Modern England - Tim Reinke-Williams and Angela McShane 1. The Hermits of Seventeenth-Century England - Naomi Pullin 2. The Trials of James Rolfe in the Archdeaconry of St Albans, c.1591-1608 - Heather Falvey 3. Entertaining their Whores on Board: Sex and the Stuart Sailor - Elaine Murphy 4. 'The Product of Real Experiences': Seventeenth-Century Surgeons at Sea - Jasmine Kilburn-Toppin 5. Singing the Sea: Seafarers and the Maritime Environment in Early Modern Balladry - Richard J. Blakemore 6. Social Expressions of Men's Emotions in Later Seventeenth-Century Jest-Books - Tim Reinke-Williams 7. Remembering Mistress Shore: Gender and Historical Representation in Early Modern England - Anu Korhonen 8. Of Lice and Men: Expanding the Margins of John Taylor's Cultural World - Angela McShane 9. Bernard Capp as Colleague and Mentor - Peter Marshall and Angela McShane Bibliography [1967-2024] of Professor Bernard Capp, FRHistS, FBA - Tim Reinke-Williams
  • Early modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700
  • English Civil War
  • Professional & Vocational
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