Abstract
Varying Titling: A Comparison of Titles and Social Stratification in 1730s Sweden This study analyses the relation between styles of addressing people and social stratification in 1730s Sweden. The aim is to see how titles signalled social belonging in practice, specifically when people communicated reciprocally. In an earlier study, titles painted a unanimous picture of social stratification. Borders between social groups were not always the same as in ideal descriptions of early modern society, but were strictly consistent. There would be little room for change if that were the entire truth; unanimous systems remain stable.That study, however, was based on only one type of source material: court protocols. This study, therefore, tests whether other types of material will give a more varied result. To do so, two source types have been studied: letters and occasional poetry. In both, unlike court protocols, private persons addressed one another.The results show that private persons practised more variety in title choices. This meant that sometimes the social differences were more pronounced, although more often they were less so. Titles were chosen more to please than to categorise. Even though the differences were small, these sources indicate a potential for change, which is a result that will be important for future research.
Highlights
This study analyses the relation between styles of addressing people and social stratification in 1730s Sweden
Här finns alltså det första belägget för att lagfartsbrev kunde överskrida protokollens gränser, även när det gällde titlar som var starkt förknippade med en specifik uppgift
Det finns dock en del skillnader, varav en är av teknisk karaktär
Summary
This study analyses the relation between styles of addressing people and social stratification in 1730s Sweden. Präster lärda, hantverkare mäster; människor av högre rang fick finare titlar än de av lägre etc.[17] Stånd, status, och profession var även här viktiga principer för social stratifiering.
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More From: 1700-tal: Nordic Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies
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