William Cobbett and Rural Popular CultureThis is the first rural and cultural study of the great English countryman William Cobbett (1763-1835). It binds Cobbett's radical career to his rural heritage and to the experiences and politics of agricultural workers during the early nineteenth century. As a radical, Cobbett's first quest was to represent the hardships of the labouring poor, and he adopted the labourers' cultural experiences and class consciousness as the basis of his political platform. He revolutionized press history by joining the 'pedlar's pack', from where he dispensed his two-penny broadsheets along with other varieties of popular literature. The rural labourers understood Cobbett because he articulated their beliefs and values as expressed in their own folksongs and broadside ballads. They embraced Cobbett as a radical leader and as an educator, heeding his moral instruction, his treatises on cottage economy, and his prescriptions on the recovery of Old England. Cobbett lived and moved among the labourers, and knew their political or economic grievances; thus long before the 'Captain Swing' rising he forecast the date and patterns of the revolt. His predictions came to pass and he became the single most important leader of the insurrection. His position of authority in the villages carried him forward in the cause of the Great Reform Bill and the Old Poor Law, so that by the end of his eventful career he was the sole public exponent of the cottage charter. This is a major and original work on Cobbett, and represents a breakthrough in the study of rural popular culture and in Cobbett scholarship. It will appeal strongly to a wide range of social and political historians, and have much value for all those interested in the language of class, the evolution of the English language, and the history of journalism. |
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Agricultural Labourers Annals of Agriculture April August Autobiography beer Botley bread broadside Cambridge Captain Swing cause century chopsticks Collection of ballads common consciousness corn cottage charter Cottage Economy countrymen December economic élite employers England English experience farm workers February Francis Place G. D. H. Cole George GVAC Hampshire Hannah History Horton Heath House ideology industrial January John Clare John Fielden Joseph July June labourer's labourers labouring poor land Letters living London Lord Madden malt March November Nuffield Nuffield College October old England Oxford Papers parish Parliament parliamentary patriotism Peasant petition Pitt platform plough Poor Law Poor Law Report Porcupine's poverty printer protest Protestant Reformation radical reform Regency Reproduced by permission roast beef rural England rural popular culture Rural Rides rural workers September Servingman smock-frocks Social songs Sussex taxes Thomas Tory traditional Trash urban village workers wages Whig William Cobbett Windham