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- Title
Material progress and the challenge of affluence in seventeenth-century England.
- Authors
SLACK, PAUL
- Abstract
In the later seventeenth century, material progress was first identified in England as a recent achievement with boundless future promise, and it was welcomed despite fears about the threats that it was perceived to present to national and personal well-being. The article investigates the roots of that confidence, and finds them in political economy and other intellectual developments that shaped interpretations of changing standards of living. The civic and moral ‘challenge of affluence’ was fully recognized but never resolved. Progress was accepted, and had to be defended in war-time, as the route to general happiness, ‘ease’, and plenty.
- Subjects
UNITED Kingdom; PROGRESS; WEALTH; QUALITY of life; ECONOMICS; ECONOMIC conditions in Great Britain; BRITISH history, 1485-; SEVENTEENTH century
- Publication
Economic History Review, 2009, Vol 62, Issue 3, p576
- ISSN
0013-0117
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1111/j.1468-0289.2009.00456.x