The Rev. Oliver Heywood, B.A., 1630-1702
Author : Oliver Heywood
Publisher :
Page : 368 pages
File Size : 18,69 MB
Release : 1885
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Oliver Heywood
Publisher :
Page : 368 pages
File Size : 18,69 MB
Release : 1885
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Samuel I. Thomas
Publisher : BRILL
Page : 225 pages
File Size : 31,23 MB
Release : 2012-10-12
Category : History
ISBN : 9004229299
Through the extensive diaries of Presbyterian minister Oliver Heywood, this book explores the role that individuals played in fashioning their religious communities during the Restoration, as England stumbled from persecution towards a limited toleration of Protestant dissenters.
Author : Alan Stewart
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 595 pages
File Size : 16,19 MB
Release : 2018-05-10
Category : Literary Criticism
ISBN : 0191507008
The Oxford History of Life-Writing: Volume2. Early Modern explores life-writing in England between 1500 and 1700, and argues that this was a period which saw remarkable innovations in biography, autobiography, and diary-keeping that laid the foundations for our modern life-writing. The challenges wrought by the upheavals and the sixteenth-century English Reformation and seventeenth-century Civil Wars moulded British and early American life-writing in unique and lasting ways. While classical and medieval models continued to exercise considerable influence, new forms began to challenge them. The English Reformation banished the saints' lives that dominated the writings of medieval Catholicism, only to replace them with new lives of Protestant martyrs. Novel forms of self-accounting came into existence: from the daily moral self-accounting dictated by strands of Calvinism, to the daily financial self-accounting modelled on the new double-entry book-keeping. This volume shows how the most ostensibly private journals were circulated to build godly communities; how women found new modes of recording and understanding their disrupted lives; how men started to compartmentalize their lives for public and private consumption. The volume doesn't intend to present a strict chronological progression from the medieval to the modern, nor to suggest the triumphant rise of the fact-based historical biography. Instead, it portrays early modern England as a site of multiple, sometimes conflicting possibilities for life-writing, all of which have something to teach us about how the period understood both the concept of a 'life' and what it mean to 'write' a life.
Author : Alan Stewart
Publisher : Oxford University Press
Page : 429 pages
File Size : 17,51 MB
Release : 2018
Category : Biography & Autobiography
ISBN : 0199684073
The Oxford History of Life-Writing: Volume 1: The Middle Ages' explores the richness and variety of life writing in the Middle Ages, ranging from Anglo-Latin lives of missionaries, prelates, and princes to high medieval lives of scholars and visionaries to late medieval lives of authors and laypeople.
Author : Archibald Sparke
Publisher :
Page : 242 pages
File Size : 13,77 MB
Release : 1913
Category : Bolton (England)
ISBN :
Author : Amanda Flather
Publisher : Boydell & Brewer
Page : 218 pages
File Size : 16,75 MB
Release : 2007
Category : Business & Economics
ISBN : 0861932862
A nuanced re-evaluation of the ways in which gender affected the use of physical space in early modern England. Space was not simply a passive backdrop to a social system that had structural origins elsewhere; it was vitally important for marking out and maintaining the hierarchy that sustained social and gender order in sixteenth- and seventeenth-century England. Gender had a considerable influence on its use and organization; status and gender were displayed physically and spatially every moment of the day, from a person's place at table to the bed on which he orshe slept, in places of work and recreation, in dress, gesture and modes of address. Space was also the basis for the formation of gender identities which were constantly contested and restructured, as this book shows.Examining in turn domestic, social and sacred spaces and the spatial division of labour in gender construction, the author demonstrates how these could shift, and with them the position and power of women. She shows that the ideological assumption that all women are subject to all men is flawed, and exposes the limitations of interpretations which rely on the model and binary opposition of public/private, male/female, to describe gender relations and theirchanges across the period, thus offering a much more complex and picture than has hitherto been perceived. The book will be essential reading not just for historians of the family and of women, but for all those studying early modern social history. AMANDA FLATHER is a lecturer in the Department of History at the University of Essex.
Author : Tim Thornton
Publisher : Boydell & Brewer Ltd
Page : 294 pages
File Size : 33,3 MB
Release : 2006
Category : History
ISBN : 9781843832591
Thornton also sheds light on areas where popular culture and politics were uneasily interlinked: the powerful political influence of those outside elite groups; the variations in political culture across the country; and the considerable continuing power of mystical, supernatural, and 'non-rational' ideas in British social and political life into the nineteenth century."--Jacket.
Author : Oliver Heywood
Publisher :
Page : 398 pages
File Size : 50,92 MB
Release : 1882
Category :
ISBN :
Author : Joseph Horsfall Turner
Publisher :
Page : 280 pages
File Size : 16,40 MB
Release : 1906
Category : Clergy
ISBN :
Author : George A. Starr
Publisher : Ardent Media
Page : 220 pages
File Size : 50,3 MB
Release : 1965
Category : Art
ISBN :
The Description for this book, Defoe and Spiritual Autobiography, will be forthcoming.