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Utopia pre-empted: Kett's Rebellion, commoning, and the hysterical sublime

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Abstract

In 1549, on Mousehold Heath, outside Norwich, the campmen of Kett's Rebellion created the greatest practical utopian project of Tudor England. Using a commoning rhetoric and practice, they tried to restore the moral economy of the county community, ally themselves with the reforming regime of Protector Somerset, and create a Protestant monarchical republic of small producers. In opposition, Tudor gentlemen and their chroniclers used 'the hysterical sublime', a rhetoric and practice of pre-emptive decisionist violence, to crush the Norwich commune, overthrow Somerset, and accelerate capitalist primitive accumulation. These two visions of culture and society continued to clash in Tudor England, but the gentlemen had gained the upper hand.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)3-53
Number of pages51
JournalHistorical Materialism
Volume16
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 1 2008

Keywords

  • Campmen
  • Commoning
  • Kett's Rebellion
  • Peasant Rebellions
  • Primitive accumulation
  • Tudor England
  • Utopia

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