Press Censorship in Caroline England

Cyndia Susan Clegg

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Author
Cyndia Susan Clegg
Publish Date
2008-03-27
Book Type
Hardcover
Number of Pages
298
Publisher Name
Cambridge University Press
ISBN-10
0521876680
ISBN-13
9780521876681
citemno
109061
Edition
Illustrated
Subject
European History
SKU
9780521876681

Description

Between 1625 and 1640, a distinctive cultural awareness of censorship emerged, which ultimately led the Long Parliament to impose drastic changes in press control. The culture of censorship addressed in this study helps to explain the divergent historical interpretations of Caroline censorship as either draconian or benign. Such contradictions transpire because the Caroline regime and its critics employed similar rhetorical strategies that depended on the language of orthodoxy, order, tradition, and law, but to achieve different ends. Building on her two previous studies on press censorship in Elizabethan and Jacobean England, Cyndia Clegg scrutinizes all aspects of Caroline print culture: book production in London, the universities, and on the Continent; licensing and authorization practices in both the Stationers' Company and among the ecclesiastical licensers; cases before the courts of High Commission and Star Chamber and the Stationers' Company's Court of Assistants; and trade regulation.