My Home in L'Arche
Stories from L'Arche Communities in Australia
Le professeur émérite Stephen H. Rigby s'emploie à améliorer l'érudition médiévale traditionnelle et la recherche historique empirique par l'engagement avec diverses approches théoriques. Son travail explore l'histoire sociale et économique de l'Angleterre médiévale, se concentrant particulièrement sur le développement urbain, la gouvernance et les conflits à l'ère post-Peste Noire. Rigby explore également la littérature anglaise de la fin du Moyen Âge dans son contexte historique, examinant les significations sociales des textes médiévaux et leur relation avec les idéologies prédominantes. De plus, ses recherches portent sur la philosophie de l'histoire, l'intersection de l'histoire et de la théorie sociale, offrant des critiques du matérialisme historique et de l'historiographie marxiste. Ses intérêts s'étendent à la théorie sociale et politique médiévale, analysant son application dans les œuvres de personnalités telles que Christine de Pizan, et ses projets actuels impliquent la contextualisation de personnages littéraires dans leurs cadres historiques.



Stories from L'Arche Communities in Australia
At the start of the fourteenth century, Boston (Lincolnshire), was one of England's largest and wealthiest towns and played a leading role in the country's overseas trade, attracting merchants and commodities from as far afield as Italy, Gascony, the Low Countries, Germany and Scandinavia and was second only to London in many branches of trade. Yet, two centuries later, as the accounts of the royal customs reveal, Boston's overseas trade was of minor significance, as the capital came to dominate the nation's commerce at the expense of its provincial ports. This book offers a comprehensive guide to the evolution of the medieval English customs system and discusses the reliability of the sources which it generated. It brings together all the statistical data from Boston's enrolled customs accounts for the period from 1279 to 1548 concerning the fluctuations in volume of the port's trade, the transformation in the nature of its imports and exports and the changes in the origins of the merchants, whether English or alien, who traded there. It will be of interest to all scholars and students of medieval English towns and, in particular, to those concerned with Anglo-Hanseatic trade in the later Middle Ages.
Engels is perhaps the most neglected, and certainly the most unfashionable, of the major socialist thinkers. Yet many of the most problematical aspects of Marxist theory, such as dialectics, materialism, base and superstructure, scientific socialism and gender, are dealt with most explicitly in the classic texts of Marxism by Engels rather than by Marx himself. This work is not an account of Engels' life. Rather, it offers an interpretation of Engels' social theory, politics and philosophy. Its purpose is to assess Engels' contribution to the genesis of Marxism in the period before 1848; to ask how far Engels departed from this paradigm in the years after 1848; and to examines the degree to which Marx himself shared Engels' intellectual trajectory.