Description
This book looks at popular belief through a detailed study of the cheapest printed wares in London in the century after the Reformation.
Reviews
'This is a fascinating study of the impact of print and Protestanism on the popular culture of early modern England ... Tessa Watt makes an important contribution to our knowledge of how popular culture functioned in early modern society.' Journal of Ecclesiastical History
'(Tessa Watt's) serious respectful study ... avoids both the value-judgements of the iconoclast and an unselective conceptual confusion, and allows her subject cognitive form and richness.' The Times Higher Education Supplement
'This is a pioneering book ... (which) will start historians thinking in a new way about the social and intellectual life of ordinary people in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries.' Christopher Hill
Awards
Winner of Whitfield Prize 1992.
Book Information
ISBN 9780521458276
Author Tessa Watt
Format Paperback
Page Count 392
Imprint Cambridge University Press
Publisher Cambridge University Press
Weight(grams) 645g
Dimensions(mm) 229mm * 152mm * 22mm