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Remembering the Past in Early Modern England: Oral and Written Tradition
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 12 February 2009
Extract
For students of the interaction between oral and written forms of communication the early modern period provides an important case study. England in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries was far from being an oral society; and yet it was not a completely literate one either. On the one hand, old vernacular traditions had long been infused and supplemented, or corrupted and destroyed, by the written word; on die other hand, only a certain part of the population could read and write or ever relied on the products of literacy. Indeed, as Keidi Thomas has suggested, ‘it is the interaction between contrasting forms of culture, literate and illiterate, oral and written, which gives this period its particular fascination’.
- Type
- Oral History, Memory and Written Tradition
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- Copyright © Royal Historical Society 1999
References
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70 Holt, Robin Hood, 41Google Scholar; Westwood, , Albion: A Guide to Legendary Britain, 118–19Google Scholar; Dodsworth, , Yorkshire Church Notes, ed. Clay, , 52Google Scholar; Elias Ashmole, ed. Josten, , 625Google Scholar. Little John's, bow was later removed to Cannon Hall near Barnsley where it may still be seen: Folklore; Myths and Legands of Britain (1973), 294Google Scholar.
71 Quoted in Westwood, , Albion: A Guide to Legendary Britain, 371Google Scholar.
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