Politics, Culture and Society in Early Modern Britain

About the series
This important series publishes monographs that take a fresh and challenging look at the interactions between politics, culture and society in Britain between 1500 and the mid-eighteenth century. It counteracts the fragmentation of current historiography through encouraging a variety of approaches which attempt to redefine the political, social and cultural worlds, and to explore their interconnection in a flexible and creative fashion.
All the volumes in the series question and transcend traditional interdisciplinary boundaries, such as those between political history and literary studies, social history and divinity, urban history and anthropology. They thus contribute to a broader understanding of crucial developments in early modern Britain.
Series editors: Ann Hughes, Anthony Milton and Peter Lake
This series is within the History subject area.

The social world of early modern Westminster
Catholics and the ‘protestant nation’
Reading Ireland
‘No historie so meete’
The 1630s
The origins of the Scottish Reformation
Charitable hatred
Crowds and popular politics in early modern England
The face of the city
Black Bartholomew’s Day