II. Taverns, Coffee Houses and Clubs: Local Politics and Popular Articulacy in the Birmingham Area, in the Age of the American Revolution
- 1 March 1971
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Cambridge University Press (CUP) in The Historical Journal
- Vol. 14 (1) , 15-47
- https://doi.org/10.1017/s0018246x71000014
Abstract
It has long been a commonplace among historians of eighteenth-century England that effective participation in the political affairs of the nation was confined to the privileged few. The substantial truth of this is undeniable, but its recognition has carried with it the questionable assumption that there were Two worlds of politics in the eighteenth century—a tight political establishment, linked to small groups of powerful managers in the provinces, who controlled parliament, the executive, and all that was effective in the nation, and outside this an amorphous mass of political sentiment that found expression in occasional hysteria and impotent polemic, but whose effective voice in the nation was negligible.Keywords
This publication has 2 references indexed in Scilit:
- Citizenship and ConsciencePublished by University of Pennsylvania Press ,1962
- The Beginning of Parliamentary Reporting in Newspapers, 1768–1774The English Historical Review, 1959