Through a case study of the long, extra-parliamentary political career of James Acland this article demonstrates how the spoken word remained the primary form of political communication despite the challenges posed by a burgeoning print culture. Acland was politically active from the eighteen-twenties to the late eighteen-sixties in campaigns spanning the battle of the unstamped press to free trade, temperance, poor relief and electoral reform: in the run up to the Great Reform Act his scurrilous journalism and incendiary speeches whipped up mobs in Bristol and later Hull and during the turbulent eighteen-forties he travelled the length and breadth of the country as an itinerant political lecturer. His peripatetic oratory bridged local and ...
Popular Politics in Nineteenth Century England provides an accessible introduction to the culture of...
This article considers Walter Ong’s contribution on the thirtieth anniversary of 'Orality and Litera...
This article shows how perspectives drawn from visual and cultural studies can be used to shed new l...
Itinerant lecturers declaiming upon free trade, Chartism, temperance, or anti-slavery could be heard...
Itinerant lecturers declaiming upon free trade, Chartism, temperance, or anti-slavery could be heard...
As mid Victorian newspapers spoke of their ever more important role as educators and representatives...
This article focuses on the acoustic aspect of parliamentary government in nineteenth-century Britai...
When Edison invented the phonograph in 1877, the capacity of the new invention that most impressed h...
Around the turn of the twentieth century, accelerated social, political and technological changes in...
As mid Victorian newspapers spoke of their ever more important role as educators and representatives...
The Victorian Pulpit is the first book to study the nineteenth-century British sermon from the persp...
“Victorian Talk: Human Media and Literary Writing in the Age of Mass Print” investigates a mid- to l...
This study employs Charlotte Brontë\u27s Shirley (1849), Charles Dickens\u27s Hard Times (1854), and...
The purpose of this study was to answer the question: how did Charles Sumner"s oratory aid and/or hi...
This chapter explores the language and politics of Reynolds's Newspaper between 1850 and 1879. It a...
Popular Politics in Nineteenth Century England provides an accessible introduction to the culture of...
This article considers Walter Ong’s contribution on the thirtieth anniversary of 'Orality and Litera...
This article shows how perspectives drawn from visual and cultural studies can be used to shed new l...
Itinerant lecturers declaiming upon free trade, Chartism, temperance, or anti-slavery could be heard...
Itinerant lecturers declaiming upon free trade, Chartism, temperance, or anti-slavery could be heard...
As mid Victorian newspapers spoke of their ever more important role as educators and representatives...
This article focuses on the acoustic aspect of parliamentary government in nineteenth-century Britai...
When Edison invented the phonograph in 1877, the capacity of the new invention that most impressed h...
Around the turn of the twentieth century, accelerated social, political and technological changes in...
As mid Victorian newspapers spoke of their ever more important role as educators and representatives...
The Victorian Pulpit is the first book to study the nineteenth-century British sermon from the persp...
“Victorian Talk: Human Media and Literary Writing in the Age of Mass Print” investigates a mid- to l...
This study employs Charlotte Brontë\u27s Shirley (1849), Charles Dickens\u27s Hard Times (1854), and...
The purpose of this study was to answer the question: how did Charles Sumner"s oratory aid and/or hi...
This chapter explores the language and politics of Reynolds's Newspaper between 1850 and 1879. It a...
Popular Politics in Nineteenth Century England provides an accessible introduction to the culture of...
This article considers Walter Ong’s contribution on the thirtieth anniversary of 'Orality and Litera...
This article shows how perspectives drawn from visual and cultural studies can be used to shed new l...