History and the Law
Author(s): Carolyn Steedman
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Focusing on everyday legal experiences, from that of magistrates, novelists and political philosophers, to maidservants, pauper men and women, down-at-heel attorneys and middling-sort wives in their coverture, History and the Law reveals how people thought about, used, manipulated and resisted the law between the eighteenth and the twentieth centuries. Supported by clear, engaging examples taken from the historical record, and from the writing of historians including Laurence Sterne, William Godwin, and E. P. Thompson, who each had troubled love affairs with the law, Carolyn Steedman puts the emphasis on English poor laws, copyright law, and laws regarding women. Evocatively written and highly original, History and the Law accounts for historians' strange ambivalent love affair with the law and with legal records that appear to promise access to so many lives in the past.
- Describes a period of English history (c.1700–1900) when there appears to have been a high level of law consciousness among `ordinary' people
- Explores the relationship between `history' and the `law', particularly within historical writing
- Makes historical, legal and narrative theory accessible to students by presenting it within a narrative framework
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