Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- List of contributors
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: Social structure and economic change in late medieval England
- 2 An age of deference
- 3 The enterprise of war
- 4 Order and law
- 5 Social mobility
- 6 Town life
- 7 The land
- 8 A consumer economy
- 9 Moving around
- 10 Work and leisure
- 11 Religious belief
- 12 A magic universe
- 13 Renunciation
- 14 Ritual constructions of society
- 15 Identities
- 16 Life and death: the ages of man
- 17 The wider world
- 18 Writing and reading
- 19 Conclusion
- Further reading
- Index
15 - Identities
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 June 2012
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of illustrations
- Preface
- List of contributors
- List of abbreviations
- 1 Introduction: Social structure and economic change in late medieval England
- 2 An age of deference
- 3 The enterprise of war
- 4 Order and law
- 5 Social mobility
- 6 Town life
- 7 The land
- 8 A consumer economy
- 9 Moving around
- 10 Work and leisure
- 11 Religious belief
- 12 A magic universe
- 13 Renunciation
- 14 Ritual constructions of society
- 15 Identities
- 16 Life and death: the ages of man
- 17 The wider world
- 18 Writing and reading
- 19 Conclusion
- Further reading
- Index
Summary
Identity is as elusive as it is central to individual lives and collective experience. People in the past, just as today, think about their identity even when they are least aware of it. When making a new acquaintance, when entering a settlement different from one's own, when seeking a marriage partner or taking leave of the dying: on all these occasions and more, a person is called to judge and reflect on choices and their consequences, on connections and affinities, all refracted through the sense of self. And the self is multi-layered, ever-changing, hardly ever totally knowable. We change, yet we change slowly and imperceptibly in most cases. We change through self-fashioning and through the expectations of others. In what follows identity will be discussed as an evolving entity; the self will be explored as both private and communal.
The insights of historians of gender can be extended to our understanding of identity: that it is relational, always measured and experienced through affinities to other men and women. These others may be private individuals – parents, siblings, neighbours – or they can represent public entities such as the Church or the state or a monastic order. Yet each offers a set of claims and expectations, enfolded in a narrative and a mode of being in the world, which forges the individual in the most personal ways. Think, for example, of the heads of a family: mother and father.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- A Social History of England, 1200–1500 , pp. 383 - 412Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2006