Synopsis
Exploring
autobiographical texts written by European urban craftsmen
from the fifteenth to the eighteenth centuries, this wide-ranging
book studies memoirs, diaries, family chronicles, travel
narratives, and other forms of personal writings from
Spain, France, Italy, Germany, and England.
In
the process, it considers the motivations of the authors,
the changing forms and emphases of artisan narratives,
and, more generally, the significance of written self-expression
in early modern popular culture.
By
analyzing reading and writing as practices laden with
social meaning, this work aims to illuminate the changing
role of the lower classes and other groups considered
marginal in the history of literature and literacy.
It
uncovers an "Icarian" logic by which writing
about the self and one's immediate and private world developed
as a complex response to widely shared expectations regarding
the cultural and political subordination of craftsmen
and others relegated to the margins of public life and
discourse.