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Friends, Neighbours, Sinners

Religious Difference and English Society, 1689–1750

Carys Brown author

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Cambridge University Press

Published:4th Aug '22

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Friends, Neighbours, Sinners cover

Friends, Neighbours, Sinners shows the crucial role of religious difference in shaping English culture and society after 1689.

Friends, Neighbours, Sinners demonstrates the fundamental ways in which religious difference shaped English society in the first half of the eighteenth century. By examining the social subtleties of interactions between people of differing beliefs, and how they were mediated through languages and behaviours common to the long eighteenth century, Carys Brown examines the graduated layers of religious exclusivity that influenced everyday existence. By doing so, the book points towards a new approach to the social and cultural history of the eighteenth century, one that acknowledges the integral role of the dynamics of religious difference in key aspects of eighteenth-century life. This book therefore proposes not just to add to current understanding of religious coexistence in this period, but to shift our ways of thinking about the construction of social discourses, parish politics, and cultural spaces in eighteenth-century England.

'This book is … not only valuable for historians of religion seeking to understand the social, local and personal effects of 1689, but it is also a helpful reminder for social and cultural historians of the centrality of religion to the way that eighteenth-century individuals perceived one another.' Daniel Rignall, The Proceedings of the Wesley Historical Society

ISBN: 9781009221382

Dimensions: 235mm x 156mm x 22mm

Weight: 590g

330 pages