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    London Lives: Poverty, Crime and the Making of a Modern City, 1690-1800

    £27.89
    £30.99
    Price-Match is available in-store for recommended titles in CCCU module handbooks
    ISBN: 9781107639942
    Products specifications
    Attribute nameAttribute value
    AuthorHITCHCOCK TIM
    Pub Date03/12/2015
    BindingPaperback
    Pages475
    Publisher: CAMBRIDGE UNIVERSITY PRESS
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    This book surveys the lives and experiences of hundreds of thousands of eighteenth-century non-elite Londoners in the evolution of the modern world.

    London Lives is a fascinating new study which exposes, for the first time, the lesser-known experiences of eighteenth-century thieves, paupers, prostitutes and highwaymen. It charts the experiences of hundreds of thousands of Londoners who found themselves submerged in poverty or prosecuted for crime, and surveys their responses to illustrate the extent to which plebeian Londoners influenced the pace and direction of social policy. Calling upon a new body of evidence, the book illuminates the lives of prison escapees, expert manipulators of the poor relief system, celebrity highwaymen, lone mothers and vagrants, revealing how they each played the system to the best of their ability in order to survive in their various circumstances of misfortune. In their acts of desperation, the authors argue that the poor and criminal exercised a profound and effective form of agency that changed the system itself, and shaped the evolution of the modern state.