Crowds, Culture, and Politics in Georgian Britain
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Oxford University Press
Published:1st Oct '98
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
Winner of the Wallace K. Ferguson Prize of the Canadian Historical Association for the best 1998 book in a non-Canadian field
In this book, Professor Rogers looks at the role and character of crowds in Georgian politics, and examines why the topsy-turvy interventions of the Jacobite era gave way to the more disciplined parades of Hanoverian England. In doing so, he shows that crowds were not merely dissonant voices on the margins but an integral part of eighteenth century politics.Crowds have long been part of the historical landscape. Professor Nicholas Rogers examines the changing role and character of crowds in Georgian politics through an investigation of some of the major crowd interventions in the period 1714-1821. He shows how the topsy-turvy interventions of the Jacobite era gave way to the more disciplined parades of Hanoverian England, a transition shaped by the effects of war, revolution, and the expansion of the state and the market. These changes unsettled the existing relationship between crowds and authority, raising issues of citizenship, class, and gender which fostered the emergence of a radical mass platform. On this platform, radical men (and, more ambiguously, women) staked out new demands for political power and recognition. In this original and fascinating study, Professor Rogers shows us that Hanoverian crowds were more than dissonant voices on the margins; they were an integral part of eighteenth-century politics.
important book ... deserves wide recognition as a work which makes a distinctive contribution ... Rogers offers a brilliant evocation of the lost world of gestures, symbols, and an adherence to a distinctive political calendar which so characterized the popular politics of the Georgian era ... This is an important, impressive and exciting book, and one that deserves to be very widely read ... formidable achievement. * James Sharpe, Times Literary Supplement *
- Winner of Winner of the Wallace K. Ferguson Prize of the Canadian Historical Association for the best 1998 book in a non-Canadian field.
ISBN: 9780198201724
Dimensions: 225mm x 146mm x 27mm
Weight: 565g
304 pages