Rural History and Popular Culture
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Published:1993-04
Issue:1
Volume:4
Page:1-4
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ISSN:0956-7933
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Container-title:Rural History
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language:en
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Short-container-title:Rural History
Author:
Bellamy Liz,Snell K. D. M.,Williamson Tom
Abstract
This issue of Rural History has greater thematic coherence than previous numbers, with all the papers having some relation to the study of ‘popular culture’, while coming from a variety of disciplinary perspectives. Each of the articles develops a key area of analysis, but their juxtaposition helps to raise further questions – about the kinds of sources that can be used to redress the bias towards the elite that has tended to dominate the study of culture, and about the problems involved in the handling of such sources. How do concepts of class, sectional, or gender interest relate to the sense of place and local identity? How can we detect such ideas within the historical record? How should we proceed in attempting to reconstruct popular and regional consciousness?
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Urban Studies,Arts and Humanities (miscellaneous),History,Geography, Planning and Development
Reference14 articles.
1. Social conflict and protest in the English countryside in the early eighteenth century: a rejoinder;Wells;Journal of Peasant Studies,1980
2. Charlesworth A. 1980. ‘The development of the English rural proletariat and social protest, 1700–1850: A comment’, Journal of Peasant Studies, 8.
Cited by
1 articles.
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