(Source: Routledge)
Routledge is publishing a book on
debt and credit in 18th century England.
ABOUT THE BOOK
Throughout the eighteenth-century
hundreds of thousands of men and women were cast into prison for failing to pay
their debts. This apparently illogical system where debtors were kept away from
their places of work remained popular with creditors into the nineteenth
century even as Britain witnessed industrialisation, market growth, and the
increasing sophistication of commerce, as the debtors’ prisons proved
surprisingly effective.
Due to insufficient early modern
currency, almost every exchange was reliant upon the use of credit based upon
personal reputation rather than defined collateral, making the lives of traders
inherently precarious as they struggled to extract payments based on little
more than promises. This book shows how traders turned to debtors’ prisons to
give those promises defined consequences, the system functioning as a tool of
coercive contract enforcement rather than oppression of the poor. Credit and
Debt demonstrates for the first time the fundamental contribution of debt
imprisonment to the early modern economy and reveals how traders made use of
existing institutions to alleviate the instabilities of commerce in the context
of unprecedented market growth.
This book will be of interest to
scholars and researchers in economic history and early modern British history.
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Alexander Wakelam is
an Affiliated Researcher of the Cambridge Group for the History of Population
and Social Structure. His research focusses on the economic and social history
of Britain in the long eighteenth century and examines practices of exchange,
work, and the experiences of economically active women.
TABLE OF CONTENTS
Acknowledgments
List of Tables and Figures
Introduction
Chapter One: Indebtedness and
Insolvency in Eighteenth-Century England
Chapter Two: Enlightened
Capitalism – Use and Structure of Debtors’ Prisons
Chapter Three: Coercive Contract
Enforcement – Debtors Prisons as Economic Institutions
Chapter Four: The Debtor Economy
– Obtaining Release from Debtors’ Prisons
Chapter Five: The Insolvency Acts
– When Debtors’ Prisons Failed
Chapter Six: Private Enterprise –
Operating a Debtors’ Prison
Chapter Seven: Reform and the
Unmaking of Debtors’ Prisons
Conclusion
Bibliography
Index
More info here
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