Privacy in Early Modern Saxony

Privacy in Early Modern Saxony

  • Natacha Klein Käfer
  • Paolo Astorri
  • Søren Frank Jensen
  • Natalie Patricia Körner
  • Mette Birkedal Bruun
Publisher:Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KGISBN 13: 9783111264776ISBN 10: 3111264777

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Know about the book -

Privacy in Early Modern Saxony is written by Natacha Klein Käfer and published by Walter de Gruyter GmbH & Co KG. It's available with International Standard Book Number or ISBN identification 3111264777 (ISBN 10) and 9783111264776 (ISBN 13).

Concerns over privacy grow in our society. Understanding the historical roots of the phenomenon becomes more and more necessary to navigate our contemporary struggles with availability and control of personal information. When we ponder what people of the past valued and aimed to protect and what they considered threatening and needing uncovering, we achieve a broader perspective of the importance of privacy in everyday life. The early modern period, in particular, was a period in which many views and experiences of privacy were negotiated and consolidated into more recognisable feelings and norms in different layers of society. This volume will focus on Saxony, as it is a great example to explore how privacy was created and negotiated in the early modern period. Throughout the sixteenth century, Saxony rose to prominence in the broader European context through the influence of its Electors. Saxony is an emblematic context to explore notions of privacy in the early modern period, as the region underwent a range of transformations – religious, political, legal, and cultural – that reconfigured the thresholds between the private and the public. The main goals of this volume are: to put Saxony on the map of early modern studies of privacy by bringing forth the region’s contribution to political, cultural, scientific, religious, and legal developments; to challenge preconceived notions of privacy in the early modern German context by providing new analytical tools to analyse both well-known and novel sources; to inaugurate and instigate further the research of early modern privacy in regional studies.