Print politics : the press and radical opposition in early nineteenth-century England. / Kevin Gilmartin.
Material type: TextPublisher number: : International Book Distributors | : Flat No. 17, Prakash Apartment, Ansari Road, Daryaganj, New DelhiPublication details: , New York : Cambridge University Press , 1996Description: xiv, 274 pages : illustrations ; 24 cmISBN: 9780521021128Subject(s): Great Britain | History | Press and politics | RadicalismDDC classification: 072.09 GILItem type | Current library | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode | Item holds |
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Books | SNU LIBRARY | 072.09 GIL (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | 29045 |
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070.954 KHA The American Papers | 072.082090 TUS Women making news | 072.090 FIN The Edinburgh history of the British and Irish press. :Expansion and evolution, 1800-1900 | 072.09 GIL Print politics : the press and radical opposition in early nineteenth-century England. | 072.0903 BRA Dictionary of nineteenth-century journalism | 072.09034 BRA Investigating Victorian journalism | 072.09034 JON Powers of the press |
List of illustrations
x (1)
Acknowledgments xi (2)
List of abbreviations xiii
Introduction: locating a plebeian counterpublic sphere 1 (10)
1 A rhetoric of radical opposition
11 (54)
2 Radical print culture in periodical form
65 (49)
3 The trials of radicalism: assembling the evidence of reform
114 (44)
4 Reading Cobbett's contradictions
158 (37)
5 Leigh Hunt and the end of radical opposition
195 (32)
Afterword: William Hazlitt-a radical critique of radical opposition? 227 (7)
Notes 234 (35)
Index
Print Politics is the first literary study of the culture of the popular radical movement for parliamentary reform in the early decades of the nineteenth century. The period was characterized by popular agitation and repressive political measures including trials for seditious and blasphemous libel. Kevin Gilmartin explores the styles and strategies of radical opposition in the periodical press, and in the public culture of the time. He argues that writers and editors including William Cobbett, T.J. Wooler, Richard Carlile, John Wade, and Leigh Hunt committed themselves to a complex, flexible, and often contradictory project of independent political opposition
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