‘I mak Bould to Wrigt’1: First-Person Narratives in the History of Poverty in England, c. 1750-1900 (original) (raw)

Teaching & Learning Guide for: ‘I mak Bould to Wrigt’: First-person Narratives in the History of Poverty in England, c. 1750-1900

Alannah Tomkins

History Compass, 2011

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Writing the Lives of the Poor

Timothy G Ashplant

European Journal of Life Writing, 2014

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Chronicling poverty: the voices and strategies of the English poor, 1640-1840

Steve Hindle

1999

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The Wretch of Today, may be Happy Tomorrow: poverty in England, c 1700-1840

Sarah Lloyd

2017

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A New History from Below

Tim Hitchcock

2004

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Archives and Records The Journal of the Archives and Records Association The first century of welfare: poverty and poor relief in Lancashire 1620–1730

Robert F W Smith

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“It Is Extreme Necessity That Makes Me Do This”: Some “Survival Strategies” of Pauper Households in London's West End During the Early Eighteenth Century”

jeremy Boulton

International Review of Social History, 2000

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Ruth Livesey

Journal of Victorian Culture, 2004

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Joseph Harley

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Sarah Lloyd

Past & Present, 2004

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Ian Gazeley

Explorations in Economic History, 2014

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Poverty, gender and life-cycle under the English Poor Law, 1760-1834 [Samantha Williams, 2011]

Samantha Shave

2012

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Poor Law Institutions through Working-Class Eyes: Autobiography, Emotion, and Family Context, 1834–1914

Alannah Tomkins

Journal of British Studies

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Zeynep Harputlu

University of Bucharest Review, 2016

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How dependent were the ‘dependent poor’? Poor relief and the life-course in Terling, Essex, 1762-1834.

Henry French

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Book: Pauper Children and Poor Law Childhoods in England and Wales 1834-1910

Lesley Hulonce

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Great Expectations and The Ballad of the Road: Simple Annals of the Poor

Mohammad Moniruzzaman Miah

Published in the GSTF Journal of Education (JEd), Singapore Volume- I, Issue- I ISSN: 2345-7163 (The Official Journal of Global Science and Technology Forum, Singapore), 2013

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How to Survive Being Poor - Paupers and Petitioners in 17th Century England

Jonathan Healey

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Writing History from Below: Chronicling and Record-Keeping in Early Modern England

Brodie Waddell

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The Complexity of Poverty. Dickens’s Response to the Poor Law from Oliver Twist to Bleak House.

Alessandro Vescovi

Acme, 2019

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Autobiography in Early Modern England (CUP, 2010) (pdf of final draft)

Adam Smyth

2010

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The Pragmatics of Poverty in the Essex Pauper Letters, 1731–1837

Ivor Timmis

Corpus Pragmatics

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Negotiating a Living: Essex Pauper Letters from London, 1800–1834

Thomas Sokoll

International Review of Social History, 2000

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The English Poor Laws 1795 and 1834: Imperatives and Disciplination of Property and Poverty

Johannes Waldmüller

2009

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Kate Chedgzoy, Women’s Writing in the British Atlantic World: Memory, Place and History, 1550-1700 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2007); Journal of British Studies 48 (2009), 230-2.

Kimberly A Coles

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Sean Shesgreen. Images of the Outcast: The Urban Poor in the Cries of London. New Brunswick, N. J.: Rutgers University Press. 2002. Pp. Xi, 228. $30.00 paper. ISBN 0-8135-3152-7

John Ramsbottom

Albion, 2004

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John Orbell

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An Irrevocable Shift: Detailing the Dynamics of Rural Poverty in Southern England, 1762-1834: a case study

Henry French

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Peter Scholliers

Victorian Studies, 2022

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Emily Morgan

2012

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Novelist and her Poor

Elaine Freedgood

NOVEL: A Forum on Fiction

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A 'well-wisher' to man-kind? : Joseph Townsend (1739-1816) and the problem of poverty

Paul Moorhouse

PhD Thesis University of St Andrews , 2018

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‘Poverty, mass unemployment and welfare’, in Chris Williams and Andy Croll (eds), The Gwent County History: Volume 5, The Twentieth Century (Cardiff, University of Wales Press, 2013), pp. 207-227.

Andy Croll

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‘“What piteous lodgings these poor men had”: Discipline and Defiance in Prison Narratives: 1559-1720’

Robert W Daniel

Ordering the Margins of Society: Space, Authority and Control in Early Modern Britain (School of Advanced Study: University of London), 2017

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Dependency, Shame and Belonging: Badging the Deserving Poor, c .1550–1750

Steve Hindle

Cultural and Social History, 2004

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