open access publication

Chapter, 2024

Language, Settings, and Networks for Early Modern Private Conversations

Tracing Private Conversations in Early Modern Europe 978-3-031-46629-8, 978-3-031-46630-4, Pages 3-30

Editors: Johannes Ljungberg; Natacha Klein Käfer

Publisher: Springer Nature

DOI: 10.1007/978-3-031-46630-4_1

Contributors

Ljungberg, Johannes 0000-0003-1618-8397 (Corresponding author) [1] Klein Käfer, Natacha 0000-0002-6766-9943 [1]

Affiliations

  1. [1] University of Copenhagen
  2. [NORA names: KU University of Copenhagen; University; Denmark; Europe, EU; Nordic; OECD]

Abstract

This chapter introduces the research area by proposing the angle of privacy to analyse the subject of everyday conversations in early modern Europe. Such conversations are especially hard to tackle, as they were very rarely recorded, either for being considered trivial exchanges or for dealing with issues that people preferred to keep out of public scrutiny. Nevertheless, through a careful exploration of diaries, court cases, art and material culture, as well as literary and intellectual developments, it is possible to peek through the veil of privacy in early modern conversations. Against this background, the chapter presents the overall aim of the volume to examine the language, settings, and networks of conversations perceived as private.

Keywords

Early, Europe, angle, area, art, background, cases, conversion, court, court cases, culture, development, diary, everyday conversation, exchange, exploration, intellectual development, issues, language, material culture, materials, modern Europe, modern conversation, network, network of conversations, people, privacy, private conversations, public scrutiny, research, research area, scrutiny, sets, subjects, veil, volume

Data Provider: Digital Science