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Creator
Date
2010
Location
Cambridge,
England
Great Britain
Great Britain
Media format
Printed text
Extent
xvi, 208 p.
Language
English
Size
24 cm
Reference IDs
Folger bibliographic ID: 243866
Folger call number: BS538.7 .T33 2010
Folger holdings ID: 308922
Folger call number: BS538.7 .T33 2010
Folger holdings ID: 308922
Summary
"How can we explain the immense popularity of the English Bible? Naomi Tadmor argues that the vernacular Bible became so influential in early modern English society and culture not only because it was deeply revered, widely propagated, and resonant but also because it was - at least in some ways - Anglicised. She focuses in particular on the rendering into English of biblical terms of social description and demonstrates the emergence of a social universe through the processes of translation from ancient and medieval texts to successive and inter-related English versions. She investigates the dissemination of these terms in early modern society and culture, focusing on community ties, gender and labour relations, and offices of state. The result is an important contribution to the history of the English Bible, biblical translations, and to early modern English history more generally"--
Notes
General notes
Includes bibliographical references and index
Contents
Machine generated contents note: Introduction; 1. Friends and neighbours in early modern England: biblical translations and social norms; 2. Women and wives: the language of marriage in early modern biblical translations; 3. Slaves and servants: a Bible for freeborn Englishmen; 4. Prince, captain, lord, duke, and eunuch: the making of the English biblical polity; Conclusion; Select bibliography
Also known as
Extended title: The social universe of the English Bible : scripture, society, and culture in early modern England / Naomi Tadmor
Related names
author: Tadmor, Naomi