Going to Market

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A01=David Pennington
Amy Froide
Author_David Pennington
Category=JBSF1
Category=KCZ
Category=NHD
Category=NHTB
City Comedies
Common Fame
court
Court Leet
Court Leet Records
courts
CUA
Cucking Stool
Debt Case
Debt Suit
early
early modern England society
Early Modern English Towns
Early Modern Marketplace
english
English Towns
eq_bestseller
eq_business-finance-law
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
fair
female commercial networks
Female Rioters
Female Traders
Gender Specific Occupations
gendered economic agency
household provisioning practices
leet
market women roles
Married Women
modern
patriarchal norms resistance
Phillipa Ward
Richard Ward
RMD
stourbridge
Stourbridge Fair
Town Hall
towns
university
University Courts
Vice-Chancellor's Court
Vice-Chancellor’s Court
women traders social relations
Women's Commercial Activities
Women’s Commercial Activities
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781472443700
  • Weight: 521g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Sep 2015
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Going to Market rethinks women’s contributions to the early modern commercial economy. A number of previous studies have focused on whether or not the early modern period closed occupational opportunities for women. By attending to women’s everyday business practices, and not merely to their position on the occupational ladder, this book shows that they could take advantage of new commercial opportunities and exercise a surprising degree of economic agency. This has implications for early modern gender relations and commercial culture alike. For the evidence analyzed here suggests that male householders and town authorities alike accepted the necessity of women’s participation in the commercial economy, and that women’s assertiveness in marketplace dealings suggests how little influence patriarchal prescriptions had over the way in which men and women did business. The book also illuminates England’s departure from what we often think of as a traditional economic culture. Because women were usually in charge of provisioning the household, scholars have seen them as the most ardent supporters of an early-modern ’moral economy’, which placed the interests of poor consumers over the efficiency of markets. But the hard-headed, hard-nosed tactics of market women that emerge in this book suggests that a profit-oriented commercial culture, far from being the preserve of wealthy merchants and landowners, permeated early modern communities. Through an investigation of a broad range of primary sources-including popular literature, criminal records, and civil litigation depositions-the study reconstructs how women did business and negotiated with male householders, authorities, customers, and competitors. This analysis of the records shows women able to leverage their commercial roles and social contacts to defend the economic interests of their households and their neighborhoods.
Dr David Pennington is an assistant professor of history at Webster University, St. Louis, where he teaches courses on early modern British history, early modern European history, world history, and women’s and gender history. His research focuses on how people in early modern England responded and adapted to economic change and commercialization. He has published peer-reviewed articles on the economic ideology of seventeenth-century members of Parliament, hucksters and the local politics of provision, and popular attitudes towards women’s participation in commerce.

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