Table of Contents
Contents: Introduction: Stabilizing and destabilizing Britain in the 1680s, Jason McElligott; Reformation and 'arbitrary government': London dissenters and James II's polity of toleration, 1687-88, Gary S. De Krey; Roger Morrice and the Huguenot refugees, Robin Gwynn; The politics of religious imagery in the late 17th century, Clare Haynes; L'Estrange and the publishing sphere, Geoff Kemp; London besieged? The city's vulnerability during the glorious revolution, Charles-Edouard Levillain; 'Eminent cheats': rogue narratives in the literature of the exclusion crisis, Kate Loveman; The 'prints' of the trials: the Nexus of politics, religion, law and information in late 17th-century England, Michael Mendle; Gilbert Burnet's Reformation and the semantics of popery, Andrew Starkie; 'High feeding and smart drinking': associating hedge-lane Lords in exclusion crisis London, Newton E. Key; Dissenters and the writing of history: Ralph Thoresby's 'lives and characters', David L. Wykes; Nursing sedition: women, dissent, and the Whig struggle, Melinda S. Zook; Judging partisan news and the language of interest, Mark Knights; Index.