Fr. 71.50

Politics and Opinion in Crisis, 1678-81

English · Paperback / Softback

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Klappentext The aftermath of the Popish Plot and the subsequent succession crisis of the years 1678 to 1681 are the context for this new study. It asks two key questions: Was there an exclusion crisis? and, Did these years witness the birth of modern political parties? Through a detailed analysis of Parliament, the court and the country, the author argues that the unrest was not simply due to a centrally organised party machine based around the single issue of exclusion, but was a broad-based controversy about the succession, fears of popery and arbitrary government which produced ideological polarisation and political sophistication. Part I examines central politics to explore the succession crisis within the context of the court and an emergent fluid but partisan political structure. Part II explores public opinion in the country as a whole, and argues that propaganda, electioneering, religious conflict and petitions and addresses committed men to organised networks of belief, but also ensured a struggle about the representation of the will of the people. Zusammenfassung The aftermath of the Popish Plot and the subsequent succession crisis provide the context for this new study. It challenges the assumption that the unrest was the result of a centrally organized party machine! and explores the wider conflict in the context of public opinion. Inhaltsverzeichnis Acknowledgments; List of abbreviations; Part One. 'A Great Crisis in Politics': 1. Introduction; 2. Politics and the succession 1678-9; 3. 'A King at Chess': politics and the succession between parliaments, May 1679-Ocotober 1680; 4. Politics and the succession 1680-1; 5. The structure of politics; Part II. Public Opinion, 1679-81: The Succession, Popery and Arbitary Government: 6. 'This outrageous liberty of the press'; 7. Public opinion in 1679; 8. 'The popular humour of petitioning': public opinion 1679-80; 9. Petitioners, abhorrers and addressers: public opinion February 1680-February 1681; 10. 'The scene begins to turne': propaganda and ideology in 1681; 11. Conclusion; Bibliography; Index....

Product details

Authors Mark Knights, Mark (University of Leicester) Knights, Knights Mark
Assisted by Anthony Fletcher (Editor)
Publisher Cambridge University Press ELT
 
Languages English
Product format Paperback / Softback
Released 09.03.2006
 
EAN 9780521024396
ISBN 978-0-521-02439-6
No. of pages 444
Series Cambridge Studies in Early Mod
Subject Humanities, art, music > History

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