Liberty against the law : some seventeenth-century controversies

書誌事項

Liberty against the law : some seventeenth-century controversies

Christopher Hill

Allen Lane the Penguin Press, 1996

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 26

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注記

Includes bibliographical references and index

内容説明・目次

内容説明

There seems to be a continuing theme in English literature on the freedom of beggars and highwaymen. Beggars and highwaymen pride themselves on their relative honesty, using a rhetoric of liberty. Robin Hood and his outlaws were "free" in the Greenwood, and stole from the rich to give to the poor. Highwaymen and pirates (or writers about them) used ibertarian rhetoric, and often won the sympathy and hero-worship of crowds at Tyburn. Contracting out of the state and its laws is complemented by religious dissenters contracting out of the state church. Economic changes - the eviction of the peasantry from enclosures - made many essential traditional rights illegal. Freedom was opposed to the discipline of the market and its laws. The author explores these linked themes - both in literature and in historical reality.

目次

  • Lawlessness
  • imperial problems
  • Christian liberty
  • society, law and liberty
  • aftermath.

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