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The Politics of Provisions : Food Riots, Moral Economy, and Market Transition in England, C. 1550-1850.

By: Material type: TextTextPublisher: Oxford : Taylor & Francis Group, 2010Copyright date: ©2010Edition: 1st edDescription: 1 online resource (325 pages)Content type:
  • text
Media type:
  • computer
Carrier type:
  • online resource
ISBN:
  • 9781317020196
Subject(s): Genre/Form: Additional physical formats: Print version:: The Politics of ProvisionsDDC classification:
  • 306.309420903
LOC classification:
  • HV6485.G7 .B647 2016
Online resources:
Contents:
Cover -- Contents -- General Editor's Preface -- Lists of Figures, Tables and Maps -- Acknowledgments -- 1 'We'd Rather be Hanged than Starved!': The Politics of Provisions -- 2 The Genesis of Provision Politics, 1580-1650 -- 3 The Recession of Provision Politics, 1650-1739: A Political Nation of Producers -- 4 Bolting Mills and Marketplaces: The Formative Generation of Provision Politics, 1740-1775 -- 5 A Viable, but Doomed, Provision Politics, 1782-1812 -- 6 The Decadence of the Politics of Provisions, 1812-67 -- 7 Conclusions: Provision Politics from the Book of Orders to World War I -- Bibliography of Works Cited -- Index.
Summary: The 'politics of provisions' - forceful negotiations over sustenance - has created surprising contests in world history, particularly in times of market transition. In England a 'politics of provisions' evolved in a dialogue between popular riots and paternalist subsistence policies from Tudor dearths to the Victorian embrace of free-market doctrines. Hence provision politics was a core ingredient of both state-formation and of the emergence of the first market economy and society in England. This book is the first full-scale critical revision of E.P. Thompson's seminal model of the 'moral economy of the crowd', which has had huge influence across the social sciences. It is the first synthesis of the many dispersed studies of three centuries of marketing and negotiations by riot over subsistence. By explaining such long-term shifts in patterns of political negotiation from parish-pump to Privy Council, this study offers a new view of why food riots were a more compelling and lasting bone of contention than enclosures, wages or votes.
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Cover -- Contents -- General Editor's Preface -- Lists of Figures, Tables and Maps -- Acknowledgments -- 1 'We'd Rather be Hanged than Starved!': The Politics of Provisions -- 2 The Genesis of Provision Politics, 1580-1650 -- 3 The Recession of Provision Politics, 1650-1739: A Political Nation of Producers -- 4 Bolting Mills and Marketplaces: The Formative Generation of Provision Politics, 1740-1775 -- 5 A Viable, but Doomed, Provision Politics, 1782-1812 -- 6 The Decadence of the Politics of Provisions, 1812-67 -- 7 Conclusions: Provision Politics from the Book of Orders to World War I -- Bibliography of Works Cited -- Index.

The 'politics of provisions' - forceful negotiations over sustenance - has created surprising contests in world history, particularly in times of market transition. In England a 'politics of provisions' evolved in a dialogue between popular riots and paternalist subsistence policies from Tudor dearths to the Victorian embrace of free-market doctrines. Hence provision politics was a core ingredient of both state-formation and of the emergence of the first market economy and society in England. This book is the first full-scale critical revision of E.P. Thompson's seminal model of the 'moral economy of the crowd', which has had huge influence across the social sciences. It is the first synthesis of the many dispersed studies of three centuries of marketing and negotiations by riot over subsistence. By explaining such long-term shifts in patterns of political negotiation from parish-pump to Privy Council, this study offers a new view of why food riots were a more compelling and lasting bone of contention than enclosures, wages or votes.

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Electronic reproduction. Ann Arbor, Michigan : ProQuest Ebook Central, 2024. Available via World Wide Web. Access may be limited to ProQuest Ebook Central affiliated libraries.

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