This book explores how women of the poorer and middling sorts in early modern England sought to make the best of their lives in a society that excluded or marginalized them in almost every sphere. It argues that networks of close friends ( gossips ) provided invaluable moral and practical support, helping them to shape their own lives and to play an active role in the affairs of the local community.
1. Introduction
2. Patriarchy and the World of Gossips
3. Families and Gossips: The Experience of Marriage
4. Maidservants and the Politics of the Household
5. Women and Neighbours: Female Disputes
6. Women and Neighbours: Disputes with Men
7. Women as Citizens: Public and Political Life
8. Recreation, Religion, and Female Culture
9. Conclusion
Bibliography of Unpublished Sources
Index
Capp brings to the subject his wide knowledge of the political, social and religious history of the Interregnum ... The whole is based on the most meticulous scholarship in a very wide range of printed and manuscript sources. --
Times Literary Supplement Perhaps the most fascinating, readable book on gender and social history by a historian this year. --
Studies in English Literature 1500-1900