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Seller's Description:
Minor rubbing. A rubberstamp to reverse of title-page. VG., dust. 22x14cm, xv, 335 pp. Contents: Versions of moral economy: Covetousness in the countryside: agrarian complaint and mid-Tudor reform; Moral economics and the Tudor-Stuart Church; The rural vision of Renaissance satire; Agrarian communism: Imperatives of improvement: Husbandry manuals and agrarian improvement; ' To know one's own': the discourse of the estate surveyor; Georgic economics; The profits and pleasures of the land: Chorography: the view from the gentleman's seat; Rural poetics. ["This book presents a fresh view of crucial processes of change, offering through an interdisciplinary analysis, fresh insights into both the history and literature of the land in early modern England. In the period 1500 to 1660 the practices and values of rural England were exposed to unprecedented challenges. Within this context a wide variety of commentators examined and debated the changing conditions, a process documented in the pages of sermons, pamphlets, satiric verse and drama, husbandry and surveying manuals, chorographical tracts, and rural poetry. The book argues that important movements revised assumptions about agrarian England, and shaped bold new appreciations of rural life. While Tudor moralists responded to social crises by asserting ideals of rural stability and community, by the seventeenth century a discourse of improvement promoted divergent notions of thrift and property. "-Publisher's description]