MRP: Mentality

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C17th mentality bibliography

Editorial history

21/08/11, CSG: Created page

This page is at an early stage of development






Overview

This page provides a draft bibliography of books and articles dealing with issues of mentality and identity in the seventeenth century



Suggested links


See Bibliography



To do




Bibliography


- Bedford, Ronald, & Lloyd Davis & Philippa Kelly, Early modern English lives: autobiography and self-representation, 1500-1660 (Aldershot, 2007)

  • See especially Ch. 4 'Framing a reflected self: language and the mirror', pp. 97-124, and Ch. 7 'A gendered genre: autobiographical writings by three early modern women', pp.163-202[French, Henry, and Jonathan Barry, Identity and agency in England, 1500-1800 (London, 2004)]


- Jonathan Barry is Head of the School of Historical, Political and Sociological Studies at the University of Exeter

- "This collection of essays is arranged around the central issue raised by this raft of new empirical research--the relationship between social identity, or the "vision of the self," and the ways in which this can explain historical agency. If identities in early modern society were multiple, complex, and dependent on context, rather than homogenous, consistent, or easily determined, then it is difficult to make simple causal links to behavior. This collection aims to make innovative new research on the structures of English society available to the wider scholarly audience. The essays use a number of detailed contextual case studies to explore the twin themes of the nature of identities in early modern society, and their role in influencing historical agency. They examine the variety of identities available to individuals in early modern England, and the ways in which these were invoked and employed."

Helgerson, Richard, Forms of nationhood: the Elizabethan writing of England (Chicago, 1992)

- O'Day, Rosemary, Women's agency in early modern Britain and the American colonies: patriarchy, partnership and patronage (Harlow, 2007)

- Rosemary O'Day is Professor of History at the Open University. Her work is focussed on English and American early modern social and religious history.

- Discusses Helen Berry's work on women & coffee houses