
Dr Mark Hailwood
BA (E.Anglia), MA (Warw.), PhD (Warw.)
Expertise
A first-generation academic from a working-class background, I am a social historian of England in the period c.1500-1750, with a particular interest in the relationship between historical change and everyday life.
Current positions
Senior Lecturer in Early Modern History
Department of History (Historical Studies)
Contact
Press and media
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Research interests
A first-generation academic from a working-class background, I am a social historian of England in the period c.1500-1750, with a particular interest in the relationship between historical change and the everyday lives of ordinary men and women. My main research interests include:
- the history of drinking
- the history of work (especially the gender division of labour and work-based identities)
- the histories of time-telling and time-use
- the history of literacies
- the history of the South West
- approaches to the study of 'popular culture' and 'history from below'
My first book, Alehouses and Good Fellowship in Early Modern England, was published in 2014. For more information on my other publications see the 'Research Outputs' section of these pages.
Between 2015 and 2018 I worked with Professor Jane Whittle on a Leverhulme Trust funded project on 'Women's Work in Rural England, 1500-1700', which investigated women's and men's work activities using incidental evidence from witness statements given before the courts. This resulted in a co-authored article on 'The Gender Division of Labour in Early Modern England' in Economic History Review, and solo-authored articles on 'Time and Work in Rural England, 1500-1700' and 'Rethinking Literacy in Rural England, 1550-1700', both in Past and Present. From 2019 to 2024 I am working with Jane on an ERC funded follow-up project on 'Forms of Labour: Gender, Freedom and Experience of Work in the Preindustrial Economy', which will result in a co-authored book (also with Hannah Robb and Taylor Aucoin) on The Experience of Work in Early Modern England with Cambridge University Press.
Across 2022 and 2023 I was a core scholar on a SSHRC Canada funded project on 'Writing Class: Public Engagement and Politics in the New Class History'.
For the academic year 2023 to 2024 I have a British Academy Mid-Career Fellowship to work on a book on Everyday Life in the Seventeenth-Century English Village, which focuses on my hometown of Portishead in Somerset.
I am a contributor to the collaborative early modern history blog the many-headed monster; I tweet in a professional capacity as @mark_hailwood; and I am a founding director of the international and interdisciplinary Drinking Studies Network.
I am also club historian and regular captain of The Erratics Cricket Club.Projects and supervisions
Research projects
Everyday Life and Early Modernity in the English Village
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of History (Historical Studies)Dates
01/09/2023 to 31/08/2024
Writing Class: Public Engagement and Politics in the New Class History
Principal Investigator
Description
Writing Class: Public Engagement and Politics in the New Class History is an international workshop series that offers historians the chance to explicate class history, calling it by its name…Managing organisational unit
Department of History (Historical Studies)Dates
01/04/2022 to 12/11/2023
FORMSofLABOUR (Exeter lead - Prof J Whittle)
Principal Investigator
Managing organisational unit
Department of History (Historical Studies)Dates
01/09/2019 to 31/08/2024
Men in pubs – pubs as social spaces in the life-stories of older men
Role
Co-Investigator
Description
This project aims to:
• Initiate a new interdisciplinary partnership on the topic of the role of pubs in the social lives and social connections of older men (65+) in Bristol.
• Establish…Managing organisational unit
School for Policy StudiesDates
03/01/2018 to 31/07/2018
Women's Work in Rural England, 1500-1700
Role
Researcher
Description
Can be found here: https://earlymodernwomenswork.wordpress.com/2018/03/09/the-projects-findings-what-work-did-women-and-men-do-in-early-modern-england/Managing organisational unit
Department of History (Historical Studies)Dates
02/03/2015 to 31/10/2018
Thesis supervisions
Distilled Spirits, the Self, and Society in Early Modern England (1660 – 1760)
Supervisors
‘When the Pancake Bell Rings’
Supervisors
The Skimmington Riots in the Forest of Dean, 1631-32
Supervisors
'Satan at Noon'
Supervisors
“His wyfe the chiefe doer of it”
Supervisors
Publications
Recent publications
02/04/2025Comparing the gender division of labour in early modern Sweden and England
Continuity and Change
The Experience of Work in Early Modern England
The Experience of Work in Early Modern England
Rethinking Literacy in Rural England, 1550–1700
Past and Present
Work and Identity in Early Modern England
Transactions of the Royal Historical Society
The gender division of labour in early modern England
Economic History Review