Extraordinarily broad-ranging history of the rise of the English language and of popular politics in medieval and early modern England.Hinweis: Dieser Artikel kann nur an eine deutsche Lieferadresse ausgeliefert werden.
David Rollison is an independent scholar and Honorary Research Associate at the University of Sydney. He is the author of The Local Origins of Modern Society: Gloucestershire 1500-1800 (1992).
Inhaltsangabe
Preface: points of departure; Introduction: an uncommon tradition; Part I. The Emergent Commonalty: 1. What came before: antecedent structures and emergent themes; 2. The formation of a constitutional landscape, c. 1159-1327; 3. The power of a common language; Part II. Accumulating a Tradition: Popular Resistance and Rebellion, 1327-1549: 4. Discords, quarrels and factions of the commonalty: an ensemble of popular demands, 1328-81; 5. The spectre of commonalty: popular rebellion and the commonweal, 1381-1549; Part III. The English Explosion: 6. How trade became an affair of state: the politics of industry, 1381-1640; 7. Touching the wires: industry and empire; Part IV. The Empowered Community: 8. 'The first pace that is sick': the revolution of politics in Shakespeare's Coriolanus; 9. 'Boiling hot with questions': the English Revolution and the parting of the ways.
Preface: points of departure; Introduction: an uncommon tradition; Part I. The Emergent Commonalty: 1. What came before: antecedent structures and emergent themes; 2. The formation of a constitutional landscape, c. 1159-1327; 3. The power of a common language; Part II. Accumulating a Tradition: Popular Resistance and Rebellion, 1327-1549: 4. Discords, quarrels and factions of the commonalty: an ensemble of popular demands, 1328-81; 5. The spectre of commonalty: popular rebellion and the commonweal, 1381-1549; Part III. The English Explosion: 6. How trade became an affair of state: the politics of industry, 1381-1640; 7. Touching the wires: industry and empire; Part IV. The Empowered Community: 8. 'The first pace that is sick': the revolution of politics in Shakespeare's Coriolanus; 9. 'Boiling hot with questions': the English Revolution and the parting of the ways.
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