What is it about?

This special issue explores what it felt like to live in the houses of early modern England. It investigates how the changes which were taking place then affected the experience of being indoors in the period when Elizabeth I was on the throne and Shakespeare was writing his plays. It looks in particular at the role textiles played in those experiences, and how we might find out what they were like. It explores how they worked - they often had stories painted on them or woven into them, and we discover here how those stories might have been read, and how they altered the experience of living at home in this period.

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Why is it important?

This special issue is unique because it brings together historians, museum curators and scientists to explore what it felt like to live at home in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries. This has allowed us to run experiments in real spaces and explore both quantitatively and qualitatively how people might have moved around them and interacted with them. It has made it possible to assess how textiles alter spaces, and how we read the stories which were painted and woven into them. By doing this kind of work we have been able to find out more about the kinds of living experience that Shakespeare, for instance, might have had than has been possible before.

Perspectives

This special issue represents some of the most exciting work I've ever done on early modern England - it's allowed me to use all the research I've conducted in archives around the country, and put it into practice in real houses. We even stayed the night in one of them! (you can find out more about that night here: https://materialhistories.wordpress.com/) It has been fascinating working with museums and their visitors in order to undertake the experiments you can read about too.

Prof Catherine T. Richardson
University of Kent

Read the Original

This page is a summary of: Ways of Seeing Early Modern Decorative Textiles, Textile History, January 2016, Taylor & Francis,
DOI: 10.1080/00404969.2016.1144672.
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