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This book is a major new contribution to the study of cultural
identities in Britain and Ireland from the Reformation to
Romanticism. It provides a fresh perspective on the rise of
interest in British vernacular (or "folk") cultures, which has
often been elided with the emergence of British Romanticism and its
Continental precursors. Here the Romantics' discovery of and
admiration for vernacular traditions is placed in a longer
historical timeline reaching back to the controversies sparked by
the Protestant Reformation. The book charts the emergence of a
nuanced discourse about vernacular cultures, developing in response
to the Reformers' devastating attack on customary practices and
beliefs relating to the natural world, seasonal festivities, and
rites of passage. It became a discourse grounded in humanist
Biblical and antiquarian scholarship; informed by the theological
and pastoral problems of the long period of religious instability
after the Reformation; and, over the course of the eighteenth
century, colored by new ideas about culture drawn from
Enlightenment historicism and empiricism. This study shows that
Romantic literary primitivism and Romantic social thought, both
radical and conservative, grew out of this rich context. It will be
welcomed by historians of early modern and eighteenth-century
Britain and those interested in the study of religious and
vernacular cultures.
This book is a major new contribution to the study of cultural
identities in Britain and Ireland from the Reformation to
Romanticism. It provides a fresh perspective on the rise of
interest in British vernacular (or "folk") cultures, which has
often been elided with the emergence of British Romanticism and its
Continental precursors. Here the Romantics' discovery of and
admiration for vernacular traditions is placed in a longer
historical timeline reaching back to the controversies sparked by
the Protestant Reformation. The book charts the emergence of a
nuanced discourse about vernacular cultures, developing in response
to the Reformers' devastating attack on customary practices and
beliefs relating to the natural world, seasonal festivities, and
rites of passage. It became a discourse grounded in humanist
Biblical and antiquarian scholarship; informed by the theological
and pastoral problems of the long period of religious instability
after the Reformation; and, over the course of the eighteenth
century, colored by new ideas about culture drawn from
Enlightenment historicism and empiricism. This study shows that
Romantic literary primitivism and Romantic social thought, both
radical and conservative, grew out of this rich context. It will be
welcomed by historians of early modern and eighteenth-century
Britain and those interested in the study of religious and
vernacular cultures.
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