An examination of how trade and commerce were viewed from the "outside",
in a period of vast change.
Late seventeenth- and early eighteenth-century England - the period
between the Restoration and the South Sea Bubble - was dramatically
transformed by the massive cost of fighting wars, and, significantly, a
huge increase in the re-export trade. This book seeks to ask how
commerce was legitimated, promoted, fashioned, defined and understood in
this period of spectacular commercial and financial "revolution". It
examines the packaging and portrayal of commerce, and of commercial
knowledge, positioning itself between studies of merchant culture on the
one hand and of the commercialisation of society on the other. It
focuses on four main areas: the Royal Exchange where the London trading
community gathered; sermons preached before mercantile audiences;
periodicals and newspapers concerned with trade; and commercial didactic
literature.
Dr NATASHA GLAISYER teaches in the Department of History at the
University of York.