Press, Politics and the Public Sphere in Europe and North America, 1760-1820

Couverture
Hannah Barker, Simon Burrows
Cambridge University Press, 27 juin 2002 - 263 pages
Newspapers are a vital component of print and political cultures, and as such they informed as well as documented the social and political upheavals of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. However, despite the huge influence attributed to them by both contemporary observers and historians, our knowledge of the nature and function of the newspaper press itself remains scant. Press, Politics and the Public Sphere in Europe and North America, 1760-1820 aims to fill this gap by examining aspects of the press in several European countries and America, both individually and comparatively, during this particularly turbulent and important period. Contributors explore the relationship between newspapers and social change, specifically in the context of the part played by the press in the political upheavals of the time. The collection examines the relationship between newspapers and public opinion, and attempts to define their place in the emergence of a 'public sphere'.
 

Table des matières

Introduction
1
The cosmopolitan press 17601815
23
The Netherlands c 17501813
48
Germany c 17601815
69
England c 17601815
77
HANNAH BARKER
93
Ireland c 17601830
113
America 17501820
140
France c 17501789
151
JACK CENSER
159
The French revolutionary press
182
Italy 17601815
201
Italy c 17601815
203
Russia c 17901830
224
Index
248
Droits d'auteur

America c 17501820
141

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À propos de l'auteur (2002)

Hannah Barker is Senior Lecturer in history at the University of Manchester. Simon Burrows is Lecturer in modern history at the University of Leeds.

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