Pamphlets, printing, and political culture in the early Dutch Republic

Bibliographic Information

Pamphlets, printing, and political culture in the early Dutch Republic

Craig E. Harline

(Archives internationales d'histoire des idées = International archives of the history of ideas, 116)

M. Nijhoff , Distributors for the U.S. and Canada, Kluwer Academic, 1987

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Note

Bibliography: p. 285-[300]

Includes index

Description and Table of Contents

Description

This book resulted from a desire to understand the role of pamphlets in the political life of that most curious early modern state, the Dutch Republic. The virtues of abundance and occasional liveliness have made "little blue books," as they were called, a favorite historical source-that is why I came to study them in the first place. I But the more I dug into pamphlets for this fact or that, the more questions I had about their 2 contemporary purpose and role. Who wrote pamphlets and why? For whom were they intended? How and by whom were pamphlets brought to press and distributed, and what does this reveal? Why did their number increase so greatly? Who read them? How were pamphlets different from other media? In short, I began to view pamphlets not as repositories of historical facts but as a historical phenomenon in their own right. 3 I have looked for answers to these questions in governmental and church records, private letters, publishing records and related materials about printers, booksellers, and pamphleteers, and of course in pam­ phlets themselves. Like so many other students of the early press and its products, I discovered only scattered, incomplete images of actual con­ ditions, such as the readership or popularity of pamphlets. On the other hand, I found much material which reflected what people believed about "little books.

Table of Contents

PROLOGUE: The Environment For Pamphleteering.- One: The Appeal of Pamphlets.- I In Search of An Audience.- II Jan Everyman and the Problem of Readership.- III Political Interest and the Book Trade.- Two: Pamphlets and Political Life.- IV Libelli Non Grati: Pamphlets and the Political Culture of Control.- V Preachers in the Middle.- VI Pamphlets and the Culture of Opposition.- Three: Pamphlets Up Close.- VII Canalboats, Taverns, and Dutch Politics.- Epilogue.- Appendix I Statistical Procedures and Problems.- Appendix II Position of Pamphlets on Major Issues, by Period.- Notes.

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