This article explores the polemical presentation of Oxford, the royalist capital between 1642 and 1646, in parliamentarian newsbooks. It argues that the novel seriality of the form offered opportunities for constructing political identities and identifying enemies through strategies of repetition and echoing within and across parliamentarian news media. Discussion of Oxford in these news titles suggests ways in which seriality helped establish and elaborate anti-royalist discourses by repeated reference to the corrupted centre of royalist politics. Sustained attention given to Oxford in weekly newsbooks built up a cumulative and complex picture of the city, and by extension royalism more broadly, as variously mired in Catholicism, subject t...
The army under discussion is that which was directly under Charles I's command, and was based at Oxf...
The period between the Glorious Revolution and the end of Queen Anne’s reign was a time of fierce an...
This article explores the generic proximity between history and drama in the Interregnum and Restora...
This article explores the polemical presentation of Oxford, the royalist capital between 1642 and 16...
PhD ThesisThis thesis offers an interpretation of Royalist literature of the first civil war. It par...
This article explores popular politics and royalism during the English Civil Wars through the reacti...
Developing from the recent surge of interest in the Royalist cause during the Civil Wars, this thesi...
This article considers how the image of the enemy was deployed by parliamentarian activists in civil...
With the beginning of the first English civil war, the pamphlet play emerged as a new genre which ta...
The subject of this thesis is news management in London during the Interregnum and early Restoration...
This article re-examines the career of Sir Thomas Lunsford, one of the most notorious royalist offic...
Throughout the first civil war in England (1642-1646) Henry Hastings, Lord Loughborough led the roya...
Charles I and his clerical supporters are often said to have been wary of print and public discussio...
This thesis examines the hitherto somewhat neglected but crucial role of the Windsor Castle garrison...
In June 1645 Parliament's New Model Army, under the command of Sir Thomas Fairfax, shattered King Ch...
The army under discussion is that which was directly under Charles I's command, and was based at Oxf...
The period between the Glorious Revolution and the end of Queen Anne’s reign was a time of fierce an...
This article explores the generic proximity between history and drama in the Interregnum and Restora...
This article explores the polemical presentation of Oxford, the royalist capital between 1642 and 16...
PhD ThesisThis thesis offers an interpretation of Royalist literature of the first civil war. It par...
This article explores popular politics and royalism during the English Civil Wars through the reacti...
Developing from the recent surge of interest in the Royalist cause during the Civil Wars, this thesi...
This article considers how the image of the enemy was deployed by parliamentarian activists in civil...
With the beginning of the first English civil war, the pamphlet play emerged as a new genre which ta...
The subject of this thesis is news management in London during the Interregnum and early Restoration...
This article re-examines the career of Sir Thomas Lunsford, one of the most notorious royalist offic...
Throughout the first civil war in England (1642-1646) Henry Hastings, Lord Loughborough led the roya...
Charles I and his clerical supporters are often said to have been wary of print and public discussio...
This thesis examines the hitherto somewhat neglected but crucial role of the Windsor Castle garrison...
In June 1645 Parliament's New Model Army, under the command of Sir Thomas Fairfax, shattered King Ch...
The army under discussion is that which was directly under Charles I's command, and was based at Oxf...
The period between the Glorious Revolution and the end of Queen Anne’s reign was a time of fierce an...
This article explores the generic proximity between history and drama in the Interregnum and Restora...