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Urbane and Rustic England: Cultural Ties and Social Spheres in the Provinces 1660-1780.


Urbane and Rustic England. Cultural Ties and Social Spheres in the Provinces 1660-1780. By Cart B. Estabrook (Stanford: Stanford University Stanford University, at Stanford, Calif.; coeducational; chartered 1885, opened 1891 as Leland Stanford Junior Univ. (still the legal name). The original campus was designed by Frederick Law Olmsted. David Starr Jordan was its first president.  Press, 1998. xiv 317pp.).

Bristol was a key nexus in the expansion of English hegemony which turned the global map into the pinkish hues of imperial domination. Bristol was also a place where some men got fabulously rich--"In the 1740s, at a time when almost fifty slave ships sailed out of Bristol every year, slave traders Noun 1. slave trader - a person engaged in slave trade
slave dealer, slaver

victimiser, victimizer - a person who victimizes others; "I thought we were partners, not victim and victimizer"

white slaver - a person who forces women to become prostitutes
 made [pound]8,000 profit for each shipment of African slaves." Eight thousand pounds was a lot of money in those days when labourers, the largest group in the English population, earned Is. 4d. per day. Four hundred thousand pounds a year (divided among the community of merchants who took shares in these ship in order to split up their involvement so as to control their risks) was a spectacular fortune at a time, as Peter Mathias has estimated, that the GNP GNP

See: Gross National Product
 was on the order of [pound]120 million. Thus, the Bristol trade in human cargoes Human Cargo is a 2004 Canadian television miniseries. The series won seven Gemini Awards and two Directors Guild of Canada Awards. It premiered on CBC Television on January 4, 2004 and starred Kate Nelligan, Cara Pifko, and Nicholas Campbell.  accounted for one-third of one per cent of the whole English national income. This was a truly massive influx of capital into a city of 50,000. It could hardly have avoided creating radically new modes of spending. Here, Estabrook virtually ignores the implications of Eric Williams' arguments concerning Capitalism and Slavery; this avoidance is really surprising in view of the fact that so few of Williams' critics have ever taken the time to look at how the influx of capital from the slave trade slave trade

Capturing, selling, and buying of slaves. Slavery has existed throughout the world from ancient times, and trading in slaves has been equally universal. Slaves were taken from the Slavs and Iranians from antiquity to the 19th century, from the sub-Saharan
 changed English society.

In fact, this truly massive influx of capital did just that. Perhaps the most interesting part of Estabrook's story is his short discussion (260 ff.) of Caleb Dickinson's activities in laundering his ill-gotten gains from the slave trade into real estate speculation and suburban development. Buying up farms and manors, putting the screws on tenants who owed him back rents and then dispossessing them for non-payment, amalgamating parcels into house lots, developing turnpikes, investing in spas, and generally irritating his new neighbours by ignoring the cultural codes that had held their rural communities together, Mr Caleb Dickinson is an all-too-familiar modern capitalist shark. In this regard, Estabrook's point that "The contentious aspects of suburban development may have had less to do with nascent class antagonism antagonism /an·tag·o·nism/ (an-tag´o-nizm) opposition or contrariety between similar things, as between muscles, medicines, or organisms; cf. antibiosis.

an·tag·o·nism
n.
 than with collective identities and social divisions based on setting" (265) seemed to me to be bizarre. What could have been a more virulent vir·u·lent
adj.
1. Extremely infectious, malignant, or poisonous. Used of a disease or toxin.

2. Capable of causing disease by breaking down protective mechanisms of the host. Used of a pathogen.

3.
 expression of "nascent class antagonism" than Dick inson's program to turn all social relations into the cash nexus?

I wanted to know more about Caleb Dickinson beyond the antiquarian an·ti·quar·i·an  
n.
One who studies, collects, or deals in antiquities.

adj.
1. Of or relating to antiquarians or to the study or collecting of antiquities.

2. Dealing in or having to do with old or rare books.
 fact that he had started his commercial life as a soapmaker. Where was he born? Who were his parents? Who were his partners? What were his religious and philanthropical activities? and so on. Furthermore, why was Mr Caleb Dickinson attracted to this particular form of money laundering--was it even more profitable than the slave trade? Why were his merchant-contemporaries so eager to leave Bristol in the 1740s when, for several generations, they had so resolutely res·o·lute  
adj.
Firm or determined; unwavering.



[Middle English, dissolved, dissolute, from Latin resol
 turned their back on the suburbs and countryside. Indeed, the separation of town and country in the 1690-1740 period is one of the points that Estabrook makes with great force in the main body of his book. But, that said, why did this separation lose its urgency in the middle decades of the eighteenth century? Was the Bristol of 1740 a less-liveable place that it had been a generation earlier? Estabrook gives us hints about the estrangement of the big bourgeoisie from their cramped qu arters in the alleys and warrens of this port city but he never provides a thoroughgoing thor·ough·go·ing  
adj.
1. Very thorough; complete: thoroughgoing research.

2. Unmitigated; unqualified: a thoroughgoing villain.
 analysis of the emergence of the new sensibility.

What, then, does the main body of Urbane and Rustic England set out to do? The work gets its inspiration from Peter Borsay's The Urban Reniassance (1989) against whose arguments about the English cities' growth and influence, Estabrook poses a close analysis of Bristol's experience. His book's first two sections are concerned with "Settings and Topographical Divide" and "Cultural Forms and Affinities". In these eight chapters we are shown that Bristol and its hinterland existed as two solitudes--wary of one another and keeping each other at arm's length arm's length adj. the description of an agreement made by two parties freely and independently of each other, and without some special relationship, such as being a relative, having another deal on the side or one party having complete control of the other. . The city's walls may have become useless as a defensive shield, but they symbolized a deep-seated difference that characterized institutions, spaces, resources, personal culture, the possession of material artifacts artifacts

see specimen artifacts.
, and print culture. In all these ways, Estabrook describes "collective identities and social divisions based on setting" that distinguished Bristolians from the villagers surrounding them. The very nature of the urban renaissance Urban renaissance is a term used to describe the recent period of repopulation and regeneration of many British cities, including, Bristol, Cardiff, Glasgow, Leeds, Manchester, and parts of London after a period of suburbanisation during the mid-20th century.  in Bristol was t o exclude rustics from participation rather than to transform them into citified cit·i·fied  
adj.
Having or pretending to have the sophisticated style or manner associated with an urban way of life.


citified
Adjective

Often disparaging
 wannabes Wannabes is an online interactive soap and game created for the BBC by Illumna Digital. Wannabes follows on from Jamie Kane, the BBC's previous foray into online interactive drama. The show/game consists of 14 10 minute episodes released twice a week. . This argument is developed at length and with a painstaking attention to its detailed manifestations.

Estabrook provides a highly nuanced image of urban/rural difference but he does nothing to dispute Borsay's claim that city life was undergoing a 'renaissance'. Rather, Estabrook argues that the urban renaissance was a wholly-urban phenomena. Obviously, this is an important corrective and its implications are very interesting with regard to ancillary arguments about consumerism and the possession of goods. Estabrook's chronology concerning the so-called "consumer revolution" accords better with older claims than with more recent ones and, in so doing, gives one a renewed sense that social change in the period of the classic Industrial Revolution was both a continuation of previous developments and revolutionary, in the sense that it broke free of older boundaries. Furthermore, his discussion of the expansive cultural horizons of the elite members of the Brisrolian population, that connected them to other urban centers and overseas colonies of their commercial grasp, is very good. The contrast with the narrow , parochialism of the villagers is very well-taken. Similarly, the discussion of what used to be called mentalites is excellent.

So, much of the argument in the main body of the text is well-conceived and well-executed, but Estabrook's discussion of the "urban renaissance" seemed to me to be too concerned with scoring points rather than providing his own imprint. This approach seriously vitiates his work. He spends so much time debunking de·bunk  
tr.v. de·bunked, de·bunk·ing, de·bunks
To expose or ridicule the falseness, sham, or exaggerated claims of: debunk a supposed miracle drug.
 the notion of an "urban renaissance" and its purported linkages with the countryside that Estabrook provides no explanation as to why and how and when the city colonized Colonized
This occurs when a microorganism is found on or in a person without causing a disease.

Mentioned in: Isolation
 the countryside. His account is, in fact, too stuck in the early modem period and therefore does not come to grips with the embryonic forms of modernization that emerged within the shell of an older social formation in mid-eighteenth century Bristol and its environs. To my way of thinking, this is a good book that could have been much better. It bears too much of the imprint of an earlier research project while displaying too little of the imaginative argument that flowed from his research findings.
COPYRIGHT 2000 Journal of Social History
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2000, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Title Annotation:Review
Author:Levine, David
Publication:Journal of Social History
Article Type:Book Review
Date:Dec 22, 2000
Words:1143
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