The Gift in Sixteenth-Century France

Natalie Zemon Davis author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

The Gift in Sixteenth-Century France cover

In this gem of a book, Natalie Zemon Davis explores the role of gifts in Renaissance France. From the King's bounty to the beggar's alms, from the lavish feasting and display of civic dignitaries to the humble tokens exchanged by peasant bride and groom, the giving and receiving of gifts - then, as now - held tremendous significance. Full of vignettes which illuminate life and belief in the sixteenth century, The Gift examines how the giving of presents functioned at all levels of society. As they do today, people evaluated gifts all the time - their own gifts and those of others - deciding what was at stake, and judging whether it was a good gift, a bad gift, or even a gift at all. Sometimes gifts brought peace and amity; sometimes they led to bitter quarrels and accusations of corruption. The Reformation and its liturgy were in part a quarrel between Protestants and Catholics about whether humans can give gifts to god, and what gifts we owe each other. Natalie Zemon Davis here deploys her own gift for the retelling of sometimes poignant personal stories to offer both telling cultural detail and a true historical perspective on the turbulent era of the Renaissance and Reformation.

her genius for detail makes its pages sing * Susannah Herbert, The Sunday Telegraph, Nov 19 2000 *
After reading Natalie Davis' "The Gift" we cannot speak of the economy of early modern Europe in the old way * Scandinavian Economic History Review *

ISBN: 9780199242887

Dimensions: 180mm x 128mm x 23mm

Weight: 467g

312 pages