Flesh and Spirit: Private Life in Early Modern Germany Book + PRICE WATCH * Amazon pricing is not included in price watch

Flesh and Spirit: Private Life in Early Modern Germany Book

According to Steven Ozment, "the more deeply the family life of the past is probed, the more 'modern' the pre-industrial family is discovered to have been and the more 'traditional' the modern family appears to be." In Flesh and Spirit: Private Life in Early Modern Germany, Ozment illustrates this remarkably stable history by viewing both the 16th-century family and the larger world around it through the eyes of individual household members. Ozment's five chapters illuminate the life cycle of the family from its origins in courtship and marriage to the sending forth of a new adult generation. Each of the five families--one clerical and four merchant--document the inner life of the urban family during at least one stage of the cycle. All of the featured families are well-to-do citizens of Nürnberg, one of Europe's great merchant and intellectual cities of the time. A professor of history at Harvard University, Ozment firmly commands his subject matter and convincingly weaves familial history with the social, economic, political, religious, and cultural history of the times. Although his detailed historical excursions frequently interrupt the flow of the personal narrative, the context they provide enhances the reader's understanding of both personal and societal histories. For example, his discussion of courtship and marriage encompasses high-society gossip, the coronation of a new emperor, contemporary response to the Protestant Reformation, as well as attitudes toward chastity, inheritance, and arranged marriages. Flesh and Spirit provides a fascinating look at both 16th-century Nürnberg and the private lives of its citizens. --Bertina Loeffler SedlackRead More

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  • Product Description

    Steven Ozment, the acclaimed author of The Bürgermeister's Daughter, explores family life in pre-industrial Europe, using private papers and public archives to trace the lives of five German families during the sixteenth and early seventeenth centuries. This compelling and eye-opening social history follows the families from courtship and marriage to pregnancy, child rearing, and the establishment of a new adult generation. Historian Steven Ozment provides a rounded, insightful portrait of an age and a people. His captivating narrative masterfully re-creates the social and political world of this dramatic period in German and European history.

  • 0140291989
  • 9780140291988
  • Steven Ozment
  • 25 July 2002
  • Penguin Books Ltd
  • Paperback (Book)
  • 368
  • Reprint
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