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The Social Life of Money in the English Past
A study of how people understood and used money from 1630 to 1800 in England.
Deborah Valenze (Author)
9780521617802, Cambridge University Press
Paperback, published 8 May 2006
326 pages
22.8 x 15.4 x 2 cm, 0.44 kg
'Using personal letters, diary entries, pamphlets, allegorical tales, poems, plays, and visual art, the Social Life of Money is seen from a variety of perspectives. Anthropological, literary, feminist, and social theories are firmly integrated into a dense analysis of social change in early modern England.' Literature and History
In an age when authoritative definitions of currency were in flux and small change was scarce, money enjoyed a rich and complex social life. Deborah Valenze shows how money became involved in relations between people in ways that moved beyond what we understand as its purely economic functions. This highly original investigation covers the formative period of commercial and financial development in England between 1630 and 1800. In a series of interwoven essays, Valenze examines religious prohibitions related to avarice, early theories of political economy and exchange practices of the Atlantic economy. In applying monetary measurements to women, servants, colonial migrants, and local vagrants, this era was distinctive in its willingness to blur boundaries between people and things. Lucid and highly readable, the book revises the way we see the advance of commercial society at the threshold of modern capitalism.
List of illustrations
Acknowledgments
Abbreviations
Introduction: the social life of money, c.1640–1770
Part I. The Relationship Between Money and Persons: 1. Coins of the realm: the development of a demotic sense of money
2. The phantasm of money: the animation of exchange media in England, c.1600–1770
Part II. Mutable Meanings of Money, ca.1640–1730: 3. Circulating mammon: attributes of money in early modern English culture
4. Refuge from money's mischief: John Bellers and the Clerkenwell Workhouse
5. Quarrels over money: The determination of an acquisitive self in the early eighteenth century
Part III. Regulating People Through Money: 6. The measure of money: equivalents of personal value in English law
7. The price of people: rethinking money and power in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries
8. Money makes masteries: the triumph of the monetary self in the long eighteenth century.
Subject Areas: Economic history [KCZ], Social & cultural history [HBTB], Early modern history: c 1450/1500 to c 1700 [HBLH], British & Irish history [HBJD1]