Service to servitude? The decline and demise of life-cycle service in England |
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Authors: | Sheila McIsaac Cooper |
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Affiliation: | Graduate School, Indiana University, 620 Union Drive Indianapolis 46202, USA |
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Abstract: | Life-cycle service was an essential institution in early-modern England that slowly died during the transition from a pre-industrial to a fully industrial economy. A socially pervasive and culturally broad movement of young people from their parental homes to live and serve in the homes of others, life-cycle service was integral to the demographic, economic, and social framework of the era and could not survive when that framework changed. This article examines the institution of life-cycle service, some of the underlying demographic, economic, and social structure that supported it, the changes in that structure that led to its demise, and the ramifications for young people of that demise. Although inevitable, the loss of life-cycle service with its broad social base denigrated service as an institution and was not without other costs especially for young women. |
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Keywords: | Servants Life-cycle Fictive kinship Migration Social status Youth Adolescents |
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