000 02285 a2200397 4500
001 OB-puc-41028
003 FrMaCLE
005 20251214082846.0
007 cu ||||||m||||
008 250403e||||||||xx |||||s|||||||||0|en|d
020 _a978-2-38185-262-1
024 7 _a10.4000/13on7
_2doi
040 _aFR-FrMaCLE
041 _aeng
100 1 _aElprin, Jeremy
245 1 0 _aRepresenting the Commons in Early Modern England /
_cJeremy Elprin, Mickaël Popelard.
260 _aCaen :
_bPresses universitaires de Caen,
_c2025.
300 _a154 p.
500 _aEbook
520 _a Ours is an age of extremely fragmented experiences and identities – a fragmentation paralleled by a growing awareness that we all inhabit a common world. In reality, these two phenomena have a lot more in common than one might suspect: deeply engrained individualism and the destruction of ecosystems are two sides of the same capitalist coin. Thus, the question of “the commons” becomes more relevant than ever.This book aims to fill a gap in the recent theoretical discussion of the commons by rethinking the notion from the perspective of early modern English literature and culture. It argues that the commons needs to be shown and represented, not just theorised or discussed in abstract terms. By focusing on some of the foundational, textually embodied forms through which this notion was represented and disseminated, the essays brought together here aim not only to interrogate the ways in which the commons was framed and appropriated in early modern English texts, but also to highlight the enduring relevance of these forms to critical discussions of the commons today.
540 _aCC-BY-NC-ND-4.0
_uhttps://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc-nd/4.0/
650 4 _aLiterature, British Isles
650 4 _acommuns
650 4 _aAngleterre de la première modernité
650 4 _alittérature
650 4 _aculture
650 4 _aenclosures
650 4 _acommons
650 4 _aearly modern England
650 4 _aliterature
650 4 _aculture
650 4 _aenclosures
700 1 _aPopelard, Mickaël
776 _z978-2-38185-260-7
856 4 _eElprin, Jeremy
_uhttps://books.openedition.org/puc/41028
_yRepresenting the Commons in Early Modern England
999 _c15827
_d15827