London Crowds in the Reign of Charles II: Propaganda and Politics from the Restoration Until the Exclusion CrisisCambridge University Press, 1987 - 264 էջ This study of the political attitudes of ordinary Londoners during the reign of Charles II examines not only the manifestations of public opinion - for example, riot and demonstration - but also the manner of its formation - religious experience, economic activity, and exposure to mass political propaganda. Professor Harris shows to be misleading the conventional view, that the whigs enjoyed the support of the London masses, and the tories were essentially anti-populist. Both sides had public support during the exclusion crisis, and this division stemmed from fundamental religious tensions within London political culture, dating back to 1660 and before. Attractively illustrated with polemical contemporary engravings, London Crowds demonstrates clearly the value of bringing together both high and low activity into a truly integrated social history of politics, and sheds important new light not just on urban agitation but on the nature of late-Stuart party conflict. |
Բովանդակություն
Approaches to the crowd | 1 |
CONCEPTUAL FRAMEWORK | 6 |
Reconstructing the political culture of the people | 14 |
THE PROBLEM OFPOPULAR1 POLITICS | 15 |
THE CAPACITY FOR COLLECTIVE AGITATION | 22 |
POLITICAL CONSCIOUSNESS | 27 |
CONCLUSION | 35 |
The people and the Restoration | 36 |
CONCLUSION | 129 |
The tory response | 130 |
THE TORY COUNTERATTACK | 131 |
TYRANNY AND POPERY | 133 |
THE ATTACK ON WHIG HEROES | 145 |
THE TORY ALTERNATIVE | 150 |
THE PROPAGANDA WAR | 153 |
Crowd politics and exclusion | 156 |
ATTITUDES TOWARDS THE MONARCHY 165960 | 38 |
EXPECTATIONS OF THE RESTORATION | 52 |
CONCLUSION | 60 |
The problem of religion | 62 |
THE EFFECTS OF PERSECUTION | 63 |
THE NONCONFORMIST CRITIQUE | 73 |
THE BAWDY HOUSE RIOTS OF 1668 | 82 |
THE BACKDROP TO EXCLUSION | 91 |
CONCLUSION | 94 |
Whig mass propaganda during the exclusion crisis | 96 |
THE WHIG MASS PROPAGANDA CAMPAIGN | 98 |
THE WHIG MESSAGE | 108 |
SLANTING TOWARDS A NONCONFORMIST AUDIENCE | 118 |
HOSTILITY TOWARDS THE DUKE OF YORKS SUCCESSION | 157 |
THE EMERGENCE OF AN ANTIEXCLUSIONIST POSITION | 164 |
RIVALRY BETWEEN WHIG AND TORY GROUPS | 172 |
THE WHIGS ON THE DEFENSIVE | 180 |
CONCLUSION | 188 |
The economics of crowd politics | 189 |
THE WEAVERS DISPUTES | 191 |
OTHER ECONOMIC GRIEVANCES AND THEIR POLITICAL IMPLICATIONS | 204 |
CONCLUSION | 215 |
A divided society | 217 |
BIBLIOGRAPHY | 229 |
257 | |
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London Crowds in the Reign of Charles II: Propaganda and Politics from the ... Tim Harris Դիտել հնարավոր չէ - 1987 |
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amongst anglican apprentices argued attack bishops BM Prints Bodl bonfires catholic Charles II Charles II's reign Church of England City of London CLRO common council Crown CSPD Diary dissenters Domestick Intelligence duke of Monmouth duke of York effigy English exclusion crisis exclusionist fifth monarchists GLRO Green Ribbon Club grievances groups Guildhall Library Heraclitus Heraclitus Ridens History hostility ibid Impartial Protestant Mercury Jeaff king king's L'Estrange laws Liberties London crowd lord mayor Loyal Protestant Intelligence March monarchy nonconformists November Oxford Papists parish parliament Pepys persecution petition Poems pope pope-burning processions Popery and Politics Popish Plot popular presbyterians propaganda Protestant Domestick quakers radical Rebellion Religion religious repr Restoration rioters riots Royal Rudé Rugge Rump Sessions File seventeenth century Shaftesbury Smith Songs Southwark St Martin-in-the-Fields streets Thompson threat tory tract trained bands True Protestant Mercury unrest vols watermen weavers Westminster whig whilst
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Էջ 238 - Jones, D., The Secret History of White-Hall From the Restoration of Charles II Down to the Abdication of the Late K. James