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Consumption and Gender in the Early Seventeenth-Century Household - The World of Alice Le Strange (Hardcover)
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Consumption and Gender in the Early Seventeenth-Century Household - The World of Alice Le Strange (Hardcover)
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Lady Alice Le Strange of Hunstanton in Norfolk kept a continuous
series of household accounts from 1610-1654. Jane Whittle and
Elizabeth Griffiths have used the Le Stranges' rich archive to
reconstruct the material aspects of family life. This involves
looking not only at purchases, but also at home production and
gifts; and not only at the luxurious, but at the everyday
consumption of food and medical care. Consumption is viewed not
just as a set of objects owned, but as a process involving
household management, acquisition and appropriation, a process that
created and reinforced social links with craftsmen, servants,
labourers, and the local community. It is argued that the county
gentry provide a missing link in histories of consumption:
connecting the fashions of London and the royal court, with those
of middling strata of rural England. Recent writing has focused
upon the transformation of consumption patterns in the eighteenth
century. Here the earlier context is illuminated and, instead of
tradition and stability, we find constant change and innovation.
Issues of gender permeate the study. Consumption is often viewed as
a female activity and the book looks in detail at who managed the
provisioning, purchases, and work within the household, how
spending on sons and daughters differed, and whether men and women
attached different cultural values to household goods. This single
household's economy provides a window into some of most significant
cultural and economic issues of early modern England: innovations
in trade, retail and production, the basis of gentry power, social
relations in the countryside, and the gendering of family life.
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