1st Edition
Negotiating Exclusion in Early Modern England, 1550–1800
Introduction: Approaching Early Modern Exclusion and Inclusion
Naomi Pullin and Kathryn Woods
Part 1: Exclusion and Social Relations
1. Domestic Exclusions: The Politics of the Household in Early Modern England
Bernard Capp
2. The Language of Exclusion: "Bastard" in Early Modern England
Kate Gibson
3. Women and Religious Coexistence in Eighteenth-Century England
Carys Brown
4. Failed Friendship and the Negotiation of Exclusion in Eighteenth-Century Polite Society
Naomi Pullin
Part 2: The Boundaries of Community
5. The Negotiation of Inclusion and Exclusion in the Westminster Infirmary, 1716‒1750
Kathryn Woods
6. Defining the Boundaries of Community?: Experiences of Parochial Inclusion and Pregnancy Outside Wedlock in Early Modern England
Charmian Mansell
7. Hunting, Sociability, and the Politics of Inclusion and Exclusion in Early Seventeenth-Century England
Tom Rose
Part 3: Exclusions in Ritual, Law, and Bureaucracy
8. Failing at Patriarchy: Gender, Exclusion and Violence, 1560‒1640
Susan D. Amussen
9. They "Know as Much at Thirteen as If They Had Been Mid-Wives of Twenty Years Standing": Girls and Sexual Knowledge in Early Modern England
Sarah Toulalan
10. Inscription and Political Exclusion in Early Modern England
Nicholas Popper
Afterword
Andrew Spicer
Biography
Naomi Pullin is Assistant Professor of Early Modern British History at the University of Warwick.
Kathryn Woods is Dean of Students at Goldsmiths, University of London.






