The 1630s
Interdisciplinary essays on culture and politics in the Caroline era
Edited by Ian Atherton and Julie Sanders
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- Format: Paperback
- ISBN: 978-0-7190-7159-1
- Pages: 232
- Price: £15.99
- Published Date: February 2013
- Series: Politics, Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain
Description
This is an exciting collection of essays on the rule of Charles I at a time of fundamental importance to English history. It combines the work of historians with academics from literary studies to provide an interdisciplinary examination of the culture and political life of the decade. The chapters focus on issues in politics, religion, the monarchy and culture, as well as literature and art history. Essays examine everything from the King's correspondence to the role of consort queens at court and opposition to the King in libel, satire and on the stage.
Many historians assert that it was Charles's inept and dangerous policy of 'personal rule' which was responsible for putting the country on the road to civil war. This book will be invaluable for students and lecturers seeking to better understand the causes of the conflict.
Contents
1. Introducing the 1630s: questions of parliaments, peace and pressure points - Julie Sanders and Ian Atherton
2. Force, love and authority in Caroline political culture - Malcolm Smuts
3. The image of Charles I as a Roman emperor - John Peacock
4. 'From his Matie to me with his awin hand': the King's correspondence during the period of personal rule - Sarah Poynting
5. Henrietta Maria in the 1630s: perspectives on the role of consort queens in ancien regime courts - Caroline Hibbard
6. 'The faction of the flesh': orientalism and the Caroline masque - James Knowles
7. Buried alive: Thomas May's 1631 - Antigone Karen Britland
8. Placing Caroline politics on the professional comic stage - Matthew Steggle
9. Stigmatizing Prynne: seditious libel, political satire and the construction of opposition - Andrew McRae
10. Coteries, complications and the question of female agency - Jerome de Groot
Index
Editors
Ian Atherton is Lecturer in History at the University of Keele. Julie Sanders is Professor of English Literature and Drama at the University of Nottingham