Oral and Literate Culture in England, 1500-1700

Adam Fox author

Format:Paperback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:16th May '02

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

This paperback is available in another edition too:

Oral and Literate Culture in England, 1500-1700 cover

Winner of the Whitfield Prize for 2000, winner of the Folklore Society's Katharine Briggs Award for 2000 and shortlisted for the Longman/History Today Prize

This text explores the vernacular forms and rich oral traditions which were such a part of popular culture in early modern England. It focuses, in particular, upon dialect speech and proverbial wisdom. Though the spoken word prevailed, written influences added to the cultural repertoire.This book explores the varied vernacular forms and rich oral traditions which were such a part of popular culture in early modern England. It focuses, in particular, upon dialect speech and proverbial wisdom, 'old wives' tales' and children's lore, historical legends and local customs, scurrilous versifying and scandalous rumour-mongering. Adam Fox argues that while the spoken word provides the most vivid insight into the mental world of the majority in this society, it was by no means untouched by written influences. Even at the beginning of the period, centuries of reciprocal infusion between these complementary media had created a cultural repertoire which had long since ceased to be purely oral. Thereafter, the growth of reading ability together with the proliferation of texts both in manuscript and print saw the rapid acceleration and elaboration of this process. By 1700 popular traditions and modes of expression were the product of a fundamentally literate environment to a much greater extent than has yet been appreciated.

...[a] rich and in many ways groundbreaking book... In short, the importance of this book does not lie as much in its contribution to the complex and increasingly irrelevant debate about the relation between the oral and the written in the early modern period as in the large body of traditional discourse which it has made accessible for the first time in an accurate and well-sourced form. * Folk Life, Volume 44 *

  • Winner of Winner of the Royal Historical Society's Whitfield Prize, 2000 Winner of the Folklore Society's Katharine Briggs Award, 2001.

ISBN: 9780199251032

Dimensions: 216mm x 139mm x 30mm

Weight: 612g

512 pages