Society And Culture In Early Modern France
Condition: SECONDHAND
This is a secondhand book. The jacket image is a photograph of the exact copy we have in stock. This image shows the condition of this book. Further condition remarks are below.
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Worn/faded, no tears
Pages: Good , price clipped
Markings: No markings
A landmark work in early modern European history, Society and Culture in Early Modern France presents eight incisive essays that illuminate the social fabric of sixteenth and seventeenth-century French life. Natalie Zemon Davis draws on a rich array of sources—from guild records and religious texts to popular festivals and criminal archives—to uncover the rituals, beliefs, and power structures that shaped communities across urban and rural France. Written with both scholarly rigor and narrative vitality, the collection argues that ordinary people—artisans, women, religious minorities, and peasants—were active agents in constructing and contesting the cultural order of their time. Davis illustrates how practices such as charivari, printing, and religious violence were not mere curiosities but windows into the deeper tensions of a society in transformation. The result is a foundational text that permanently reshaped the field of social history and remains essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the dynamics of pre-modern European culture.
Author: Natalie Zemon Davis
Format: Hardback
Genre: European history
Condition remarks:
Book: Good
Jacket: Worn/faded, no tears
Pages: Good , price clipped
Markings: No markings
A landmark work in early modern European history, Society and Culture in Early Modern France presents eight incisive essays that illuminate the social fabric of sixteenth and seventeenth-century French life. Natalie Zemon Davis draws on a rich array of sources—from guild records and religious texts to popular festivals and criminal archives—to uncover the rituals, beliefs, and power structures that shaped communities across urban and rural France. Written with both scholarly rigor and narrative vitality, the collection argues that ordinary people—artisans, women, religious minorities, and peasants—were active agents in constructing and contesting the cultural order of their time. Davis illustrates how practices such as charivari, printing, and religious violence were not mere curiosities but windows into the deeper tensions of a society in transformation. The result is a foundational text that permanently reshaped the field of social history and remains essential reading for anyone seeking to understand the dynamics of pre-modern European culture.