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Reading and politics in early modern England

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This book examines the activities of William Blundell, a seventeenth-century Catholic gentleman, and using the approaches of the history of reading provides a detailed analysis of his mindset. The ...
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  • 30 March 2010
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This book examines the activities of William Blundell, a seventeenth-century Catholic gentleman, and using the approaches of the history of reading provides a detailed analysis of his mindset.

Blundell was neither the passive victim nor the entirely loyal subject that he and others have claimed. He actively defended his family from the penal laws and used the relative freedom that this gave him to patronise other Catholics. Not only did he rewrite the histories of recent civil conflicts to show that Protestants were prone to rebellion and Catholics to loyalty, but we also find a different perspective on his religious beliefs. Blundell’s commonplaces suggest an underlying tension with aspects of Catholicism, a tension manifest throughout his notes on his practical engagement with the world, in which it is clear that he was wrestling with the various aspects of his identity.

This is an important study that will be of interest to all who work on the early modern period.

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Price: $130.00
Pages: 256
Publisher: Manchester University Press
Imprint: Manchester University Press
Series: Politics, Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain
Publication Date: 30 March 2010
ISBN: 9780719080241
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: History and Archaeology, European history
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'a gripping, sensitive, and insightful account of its subject, which manages at once to enhance and to challenge many ideas found within the existing canon of “recusant history".'
Gabriel Glickman, Journal of British Studies, Vol. 51 No. 4

Geoff Baker is Senior Academic Advisor at the Centre for Integrative Learning, University of Nottingham

Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Introduction
Part I:
1. William Blundell’s family and friends
2. William Blundell and the wider world
Part II:
3. Reading and the construction of commonplaces
4. Reading the confessional divide in early modern England
5. A Catholic approach to the world
Conclusion
Appendix: Map of Little Crosby and surrounding area
Bibliography
Index