Skip to content
Welcome To Our Store.
100,000+ Products for Home, Medical, Office & Classroom Needs
Search
Skip to product information
1 of 1

Learning to Talk Shop: Mercantile Mischief and Popular Pedagogy in Premodern England - Hardcover

$99.45 USD
$99.45 USD
Sale Sold out
Shipping calculated at checkout.
In stock (100 units), ready to be shipped

Available Offers

Fastest Delivery Tomorrow With Vip DealOrder within 1 hr 8 mins.

Instant 10% Discount On HDFC Banks Credit/Debit Cards EMI and CreditCard

Secure checkout with
  • American Express
  • Apple Pay
  • Diners Club
  • Discover
  • Google Pay
  • Mastercard
  • PayPal
  • Shop Pay
  • Visa
  • Daily deals
  • Return policy
  • Payment method
  • Help center 24/7

Flight Range: Up to 1,000 meters (3,280 feet)

Maximum Speed: 45 kilometers per hour (28 miles per hour)

For all orders exceeding a value of 100USD shipping is offered for free.

Returns will be accepted for up to 10 days of Customer’s receipt or tracking number on unworn items. You, as a Customer, are obliged to inform us via email before you return the item.

Otherwise, standard shipping charges apply. Check out our delivery Terms & Conditions for more details.

View Product Details
Shopping cart
Product Product subtotal Quantity Price Product subtotal
Learning to Talk Shop: Mercantile Mischief and Popular Pedagogy in Premodern England - Hardcover
Learning to Talk Shop: Mercantile Mischief and Popular Pedagogy in Premodern England - Hardcover
Learning to Talk Shop: Mercantile Mischief and Popular Pedagogy in Premodern England - Hardcover
$99.45/ea
$0.00
$99.45/ea $0.00

Product Description

by Susan E. Phillips (Author)

A new account of premodern education that offered non-elite readers lessons in navigating the premodern marketplace

Learning to Talk Shop explores the phrasebooks and guides to conversations that flooded the marketplace in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries, making a virtual classroom available to an audience who could not afford or did not have access to formal education. Privileging market share and mercantile savvy over moral instruction and linguistic mastery, these mischievous little books offered readers lessons in the pragmatic, and murky, ethics of the premodern marketplace, teaching them bargaining tactics, insults, pick up lines, and strategies for welching on debts.

Revealing what happens when language learning itself undergoes a translation out of the classroom, into the marketplace and further down the social ladder, Susan E. Phillips offers a new account of premodern education, not through erudite tombs and schoolmaster sovereigns, but through these practical books that enabled non-elite readers to thrive in an environment not particularly conducive to their success. Phillips asks what we learn and whom we can see when we look at premodern education from this humbler, more mischievous perspective, telling the tales of resourceful chambermaids, savvy black stableboys, and arithmetically adept barmaids as well as the story of a schoolgirl who compiled a textbook of her own and the narrative of a black schoolmaster teaching in Shakespeare's London.

In these stories, Phillips finds the liberatory potential in a discourse that has previously been read as upholding traditional social hierarchies in the premodern period. If we expand our archive beyond the Latin textbooks of the grammar school classroom to include these bestselling bi- and multilingual vernacular textbooks, Phillips contends, we can see a radically different set of possibilities--a premodern pedagogy that is more expansive, more flexible, and more inclusive.

Author Biography

Susan E. Phillips is Associate Professor of English at Northwestern University.

Number of Pages: 344
Dimensions: 0.94 x 9 x 6 IN
Publication Date: September 09, 2025
you might like