Countryside and country living in the 18th century

This course explores ideas surrounding the countryside and country living as well as the practical realities of rural husbandry in the 18th century. This course will particularly interest those wishing to get a sense of the place of the countryside in the English imagination prior to the Romantics.   

Course details

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Start Date
21 Jul 2024
Duration
5 Sessions over one week
End Date
27 Jul 2024
Application Deadline
23 Jun 2024
Location
International Summer Programme
Code
W35Am25

Tutors

Dr Matthew Neal

Dr Matthew Neal

Affiliated Lecturer, Faculty of History; Fellow, Girton College

Aims

This course aims to: 

  • give you a richer understanding of the practical realities of rural husbandry in the 18th century
     
  • equip you to explore the place of the countryside in the 18th-century English imagination
     
  • reveal a pre-Romantic vision of countryside and country living before the era of the Lakes poets and Nature worship

Content

This five-day course explores ideas surrounding the countryside and country living as well as the practical realities of rural husbandry in the 18th century. Never the quaint, unchanging idyll of sentimental recollection, the countryside in the 18th century was in fact home to a vibrant and complex society: economically dynamic, culturally rich, and imaginatively contested. ‘Countryside and Country Living in the 18th Century’ aims to reconstruct this world.

Presentation of the course 

This course will be taught across five seminars. Each seminar will pursue a different aspect of the period’s political and cultural history, and will involve a mixture of lecture, class discussion and group activity. The style of the seminars is informal, friendly and relaxed, and questions are actively encouraged at all stages!

Course sessions

  1. Country society: order and change
     
  2. Rural customs and folklore
     
  3. Time and timekeeping in the English shires
     
  4. Nature stewardship: theory and practice
     
  5. Capitalistic farming and the wealth of nations

Learning outcomes

You are expected to gain from this series of classroom sessions a greater understanding of the subject and of the core issues and arguments central to the course. 

The learning outcomes for this course are:

  • to deepen your knowledge of life in the English countryside in the 18th century
     
  • to reveal the ways in which the countryside and country living figured in the 
    18th-century imagination
     
  • to see the world of the English countryside through eyes other than the Romantics’ 
    and Sentimentalists’

Required reading

Please read at least one of the following three items before the course:

Mingay, G, E, English Landed Society in the Eighteenth Century (London: Routledge & Paul 1963) 

Neeson, J, M, Commoners: Common Rights, Enclosure and Social Change in England, 
1700-1820 (Cambridge: CUP 1993)

Overton, M, Agricultural Revolution in England 1500-1850 (Cambridge: CUP 1996)

Typical week: Monday to Friday 

Courses run from Monday to Friday. For each week of study, you select a morning (Am) course and an afternoon (Pm) course. The maximum class size is 25 students.   

Courses are complemented by a series of daily plenary lectures, exploring new ideas in a wide range of disciplines. To add to your learning experience, we are also planning additional evening talks and events. 

c.7.30am-9.00am  Breakfast in College (for residents)  
9.00am-10.30am  Am Course  
11.00am-12.15pm  Plenary Lecture  
12.15pm-1.30pm  Lunch 
1.30pm-3.00pm  Pm Course  
3.30pm-4.45pm  Plenary Lecture/Free 
6.00pm/6.15pm-7.15pm Dinner in College (for residents)  
7.30pm onwards Evening talk/Event/Free  

Evaluation and Academic Credit  

If you are seeking to enhance your own study experience, or earn academic credit from your Cambridge Summer Programme studies at your home institution, you can submit written work for assessment for one or more of your courses.  

Essay questions are set and assessed against the University of Cambridge standard by your Course Director, a list of essay questions can be found in the Course Materials. Essays are submitted two weeks after the end of each course, so those studying for multiple weeks need to plan their time accordingly. There is an evaluation fee of £75 per essay. 

For more information about writing essays see Evaluation and Academic Credit

Certificate of attendance 

A certificate of attendance will be sent to you electronically after the programme.