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  • Coming soon
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Expected online publication date:
November 2024
Print publication year:
2024
Online ISBN:
9781009502634

Reviews

‘This brilliantly researched book takes you right to the heart of the fabric of credit-based social relations in the French villages of the Ancien Régime, where everyone was both a lender and a debtor. It follows their disintegration from the 1760s onwards, and shows that ancient practices based on trust and solidarity still coexist in many parts of today's world with modern institutionalized and depersonalized forms of credit.’

Laurence Fontaine - Paris Sciences et Lettres

‘In wonderful and compelling detail, Elise Dermineur traces out the social embeddedness of credit in early modern France. Her study combines social science analysis with rich historical evidence to show how, long before the emergence of a modern banking system, communities were knit together by financial relationships. Constrained by laws and shaped by social norms, credit transactions could produce both solidarity and conflict. Anyone seeking historical insight into today’s financialized economy, or the fascinating connections between gender and credit, will find much of value here.’

Bruce G. Carruthers - Northwestern University

‘This lively and well-documented account of credit in early modern France is a timely reminder that it is possible to have financial systems with what Dermineur labels "human-oriented features." She documents the conditions under which processes embedded in the personal relationships of a community can be effective and what happens when they are eroded by institutionalization and marketization. Dermineur's book is a significant contribution to a growing literature on credit and debt, borrowing and lending. By excavating the past, she provides tools by which to create a better present.’

Margaret Levi - Stanford University

‘In this compelling empirical study of the world of borrowing and lending in two Alsatian rural communities, Elise Dermineur adds to the rich and widespread body of research on credit and debt. With exceptional clarity, she interweaves a micro-historical cross-analysis of credit transactions between ordinary people with the historiography. This is also essential reading for today and shows we need to rethink our current world of credit and banking, which is completely detached from society.’

Janine Maegraith - Newnham College, Cambridge

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