Paper Bullets: Print and Kingship Under Charles IIUniversity Press of Kentucky, 1996 - 292 páginas The calculated use of media by those in power is a phenomenon dating back at least to the seventeenth century, as Harold Weber demonstrates in this illuminating study of the relation of print culture to kingship under England's Charles II. Seventeenth-century London witnessed an enormous expansion of the print trade, and with this expansion came a revolutionary change in the relation between political authority -- especially the monarchy -- and the printed word.Weber argues that Charles' reign was characterized by a particularly fluid relationship between print and power. The press helped brin. |
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... monarch , " and the trial and ex- ecution of Stephen College — Weber reveals the means by which Charles took advantage of a print industry instrumental to the creation of a new dispensation of power , one in which the state dominates ...
... monarch , " and the trial and ex- ecution of Stephen College — Weber reveals the means by which Charles took advantage of a print industry instrumental to the creation of a new dispensation of power , one in which the state dominates ...
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... Monarch's Sacred Body : The King's Evil and the Politics of Royal Healing 50 3. The Monarch's Profane Body : " His scepter and his prick are of a length " 88 Part Two . The Language of Censorship 4. " The feminine part of every ...
... Monarch's Sacred Body : The King's Evil and the Politics of Royal Healing 50 3. The Monarch's Profane Body : " His scepter and his prick are of a length " 88 Part Two . The Language of Censorship 4. " The feminine part of every ...
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... monarch . Whether we restrict his return to simply the instant described by Pepys , when Charles first touched English soil as its " legitimate " sovereign , or extend it to include his triumphant progress to and eventual entrance into ...
... monarch . Whether we restrict his return to simply the instant described by Pepys , when Charles first touched English soil as its " legitimate " sovereign , or extend it to include his triumphant progress to and eventual entrance into ...
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... monarchs regulated the industry in ways that shaped the administration and nature of both commercial printing and state ... monarch from Henry VIII to Charles I attests to royal frustration with the " itching in the tongues and pennes of ...
... monarchs regulated the industry in ways that shaped the administration and nature of both commercial printing and state ... monarch from Henry VIII to Charles I attests to royal frustration with the " itching in the tongues and pennes of ...
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... monarchs , of course , had always regarded matters of state as part of their personal prerogative ; the monarch was the state , jealously resisting even the intrusion of Parliament into royal affairs . The creation of a public ...
... monarchs , of course , had always regarded matters of state as part of their personal prerogative ; the monarch was the state , jealously resisting even the intrusion of Parliament into royal affairs . The creation of a public ...
Contenido
Restoration and Escape The Incognito King and Providential History | 25 |
The Monarchs Sacred Body The Kings Evil and the Politics of Royal Healing | 50 |
The Monarchs Profane Body His scepter and his prick are of a length | 88 |
The feminine part of every rebellion The Public Royal Power and the Mysteries of Printing | 131 |
The very Oracles of the Vulgar Stephen College and the Author on Trial | 172 |
Conclusion | 209 |
Notes | 214 |
Bibliography | 260 |
284 | |
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Absalom and Achitophel Algernon Sidney attempt authority ballad Battle of Worcester become Bolloxinion Cambridge Univ celebrate censorship Charles's reign Charles's sexual claims Clarendon Press coffeehouses College College's Company concerning Culture Cunt cure discourse disguise divine Dugdale Duke Dunciad Early Modern English escape narratives Exclusion Crisis government's Greatrakes Greatrakes's healing Henry hierarchy homosexual insists John joiner King Charles king's evil kingdom language Letter libel licensing literary Literature London Lord Majesty male masculine Milton monarch Monmouth nation Oxford pamphlet Parliament Pepys person physician play Poems on Affairs political Popish Plot popular print industry printers Proclamation Protestant Providence published relation relationship Restoration Restoration England Restoration Newspaper reveals role Ronald Hutton royal identity royal power royal touch sacred satire seditious seventeenth century Seventeenth-Century England Sidney social Sodom Stephen Colledge Stuart suggests swive tion Tory transformed treason trial Tudor Valentine Greatrakes Whig women Worcester