Social change in the Age of Enlightenment : Edinburgh, 1660-1760 / R.A. Houston.

Author
Houston, R. A. (Robert Allan), 1954- [Browse]
Format
Book
Language
English
Published/​Created
Oxford : Clarendon Press ; New York : Oxford University Press, 1994.
Description
vi, 443 pages : illustrations, maps ; 23 cm

Availability

Copies in the Library

Location Call Number Status Location Service Notes
ReCAP - Remote StorageHN398.S3 H68 1994 Browse related items Request

    Details

    Subject(s)
    Summary note
    • Eighteenth-century Edinburgh was the cradle of the Scottish Enlightenment and a city of international significance. The lives and ideas of its prominent figures have received extensive treatment, but little attention has been paid to the society which produced them. In this wide-ranging study of Edinburgh over a century of social change, R. A. Houston offers unrivalled breadth of analysis of the ways in which urban life was transformed.
    • Chapters on social relationships, the use of space, the place of the poor in Scotland's capital, religious values and attitudes to urban living, riot, and popular protest, and developments in political economy build up to a powerful argument about social change in the decades before the Enlightenment. As well as providing unique depth of context for Enlightenment studies, this book explains how broader changes in social attitudes and values took root in a century which witnessed dramatic political, economic, and intellectual developments.
    • It is a major contribution not only to Scottish but also to British history.
    Bibliographic references
    Includes bibliographical references (p. [391]-420) and index.
    Contents
    • 1. Unity and Division
    • 2. Definitions of Space
    • 3. Anonymity, Visibility, and Values
    • 4. Marginals
    • 5. Popular Protest
    • 6. Corruption, Consensus, and Competition.
    ISBN
    0198204388 (alk. paper) :
    LCCN
    94013291
    OCLC
    30111494
    RCP
    C - S
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