Utopia Pre-Empted: Kett’s Rebellion, Commoning, and the Hysterical Sublime


Utopia Pre-Empted: Kett’s Rebellion, Commoning, and the Hysterical SublimeNorwich Castle - where Robert Kett was hanged

Holstun, Jim (State University of New York, Buffalo) 

Historical Materialism, 16 (2008)

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 Kett's Oak (Reformation Oak)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. Th ese two visions of culture and society continued to clash in Tudor England, but the gentlemen had gained the upper hand.

 

Click here to read this article from Historical Materialism

 


Related posts:

  1. ‘If the head be evill the body cannot be good’: Legitimate Rebellion in Gascoigne and Kinwelmershe’s Jocasta
  2. Sanctuary and the Legal Topography of Pre-Reformation London
  3. Elephants, Englishmen and India: Early Modern Travel Writing and the Pre-Colonial Moment
  4. Comment: Historical Materialism and Early Modern Studies
  5. From the ridiculous to the sublime: Ovidian and Neoplatonic registers in A Midsummer Night’s Dream

About Early Modern England