CfP: Freedom & Work in Western Europe (c. 1250–1750) (Event, 07/2022, Exeter/UK); by: 16.08.2021

ERC Horizon 2020 Project “Forms of Labour: Gender, Freedom and Work in the Preindustrial Economy”, led by Jane Whittle, Univ. of Exeter (Web)

Time: 06.–08.07.2022
Venue: Exeter, UK
Abstracts by: 16.08.2021

Work can be a source of freedom, wealth and self-respect, but also exploitation, poverty and subjugation. Existing grand narratives suggest that labour in fifteenth-century Western Europe became ‘free’ after the end of serfdom. Yet some workers had more freedom than others. Women were excluded from many occupations, while in some cultures married women had no right to own property or the fruits of their labour. Labour laws controlled workers such as servants and apprentices, who were placed in the same legal relationship to the household head as children. As recent studies of serfdom and slavery have shown, we need to move beyond a sharp division between bondage and freedom to explore the many factors that restricted or promoted freedom within and through work.

This conference explores these complex relations between freedom and work in Western Europe from 1250 to 1750. It especially encourages approaches which extend outside the employer-employee relationship to explore how family, community and state determined the degree of exploitation or empowerment in working life; broaden our scope beyond the adult male worker to centre previously marginalised workers, like women and servants; apply theoretical ideas from other disciplines to re-examine the nature of freedom in relation to historical forms of work; compare relative degrees of freedom or unfreedom across different forms of labour, cultures, legal systems or time periods; and/or contextualise labour in Western Europe with respect to forms of colonial slavery.

The organziers invite proposals for 20-minute papers that might address, but are not limited to, the following themes in relation to freedom and work:

  • Gender and women’s economic freedom
  • Age and life-cycles
  • Poverty and economic coercion
  • Laws regulating labour or commerce
  • Service & apprenticeship as institutions
  • Varieties of wage labour
  • Contracts and consent
  • Slavery, serfdom and their intersection
  • Training, skills, development of capacities
  • Domination and resistance

Please submit abstracts of up to 300 words and a biography of 100 words (in English) to FORMSofLABOUR@exeter.ac.uk by 16 August 2021.

NB: Bursaries for travel and accommodation will be available for speakers needing financial assistance.

Website: https://formsoflabour.exeter.ac.uk/conference/

Source: Rural History Newsletter 81/2021-86/2021