Robert Harley and the press : propaganda and public opinion in the age of Swift and Defoe
Author(s)
Bibliographic Information
Robert Harley and the press : propaganda and public opinion in the age of Swift and Defoe
Cambridge University Press, 1979
- : pbk
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Note
Bibliographical references included in "Notes" (p. [199]-223)
Includes index
"This digitally printed version 2008"--pbk
Description and Table of Contents
Description
In 1695, with the expiry of the licensing act, state censorship of the press ceased. The end of the licensing system coincided almost exactly with the passing of the triennial act, and from the outset there was a discernable connection between electoral activity and the rise of a virulent political press. This study seeks to explain why press regulations were not reimposed to curb the invective of the party writers; and concludes that the principal reason was the development of government propaganda and counter-propaganda agencies under the direction of Robert Harley. Contemporaries were bewildered by the development of a 'fourth estate'; and successive administrations, brought in through ten general elections between 1695 and 1715, were at a loss when it came to dealing with the problems raised by a free press. But during the course of Queen Anne's reign a government policy gradually emerged, and arrangements were made for the publication and dissemination of 'official' propaganda.
Table of Contents
- Part I. 1689-1708: 1. The propaganda of court and country
- 2. The paper war of 1701
- 3 Harley and Defoe
- 4. The Memorial of the Church of England (1705): a case study
- Part II. 1708-1714: 5. The tort' resurrection, 1708-1710
- 6. Swift, Defoe, and the peace campaign
- 7. The stamp act of 1712
- 8. The organisation of propaganda, 1710-1714.
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