In Print Letters in Seventeenth-Century England, Gary Schneider examines the intersection of epistolarity, ideology, propaganda, and news culture. The chronological focus is the 1640s and 1650s, which saw a rise in the numbers of printed letters and their regular deployment in political and religious contestations, though Schneider gives due attention to the earlier and later parts of the century as well
The first book to address the role of correspondence in the study of religion, Debating the Faith: R...
The primary aim of Knowing Faith is to uncover the intervention of literary texts and approaches in ...
This thesis explores the presentation of the war over the Rhine Palatinate in British printed pamph...
This dissertation argues that in the two centuries following the incunabula, one group of authors wr...
In this article I propose that the relatively few intercepted and discovered letters printed during ...
My dissertation connects the epistemologies of early English Protestantism and the new science movem...
In much of the historiography surrounding print culture and the book trade, the worldliness of print...
Critics who work with eighteenth-Critics who work with eighteenth-century texts have long wrestled w...
The founding of the Seventeenth Century News Letter, publishedNew Brunswick, New Jersey, from 1942–1...
New approaches to the history of print have allowed historians of early modern Europe to re-evaluate...
The recently renewed scholarly interest in historical letters and letter writing has given rise to s...
Since the late twentieth century, letters in literature have seen a remarkable renaissance. The prom...
This thesis is about anti-popery in early modern England, how its meanings and political uses in pri...
In this article I reexamine eighteenth-century “character” by rearticulating it with the period’s me...
First paragraph: Puritanism was an intrinsically bookish movement. Just as the spread of Protestanti...
The first book to address the role of correspondence in the study of religion, Debating the Faith: R...
The primary aim of Knowing Faith is to uncover the intervention of literary texts and approaches in ...
This thesis explores the presentation of the war over the Rhine Palatinate in British printed pamph...
This dissertation argues that in the two centuries following the incunabula, one group of authors wr...
In this article I propose that the relatively few intercepted and discovered letters printed during ...
My dissertation connects the epistemologies of early English Protestantism and the new science movem...
In much of the historiography surrounding print culture and the book trade, the worldliness of print...
Critics who work with eighteenth-Critics who work with eighteenth-century texts have long wrestled w...
The founding of the Seventeenth Century News Letter, publishedNew Brunswick, New Jersey, from 1942–1...
New approaches to the history of print have allowed historians of early modern Europe to re-evaluate...
The recently renewed scholarly interest in historical letters and letter writing has given rise to s...
Since the late twentieth century, letters in literature have seen a remarkable renaissance. The prom...
This thesis is about anti-popery in early modern England, how its meanings and political uses in pri...
In this article I reexamine eighteenth-century “character” by rearticulating it with the period’s me...
First paragraph: Puritanism was an intrinsically bookish movement. Just as the spread of Protestanti...
The first book to address the role of correspondence in the study of religion, Debating the Faith: R...
The primary aim of Knowing Faith is to uncover the intervention of literary texts and approaches in ...
This thesis explores the presentation of the war over the Rhine Palatinate in British printed pamph...