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“So that Every Subject Knows How to Behave”: Social Disciplining in Early Modern Bohemia

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  14 March 2006

Sheilagh Ogilvie
Affiliation:
Faculty of Economics, University of Cambridge

Abstract

“Social disciplining” is the name that has been given to attempts by the authorities throughout early modern Europe to regulate people's private lives.1 In explicit contrast to “social control,” the informal mechanisms by which people have always sought to put pressure on one another in traditional societies, “social disciplining” was a set of formal, legislative strategies through which the emerging early modern state sought to “civilize” and “rationalize” its subjects' behavior in order to facilitate well-ordered government and a capitalist modernization of the economy.2 Whether viewed favorably as an essential stage in a beneficent “civilizing process” or more critically as an arbitrary coercion of popular culture in the interests of elites, social disciplining is increasingly regarded as central to most aspects of political, economic, religious, social, and cultural change in Europe between the medieval and the modern periods.3

Type
Research Article
Copyright
© Society for Comparative Study of Society and History

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