Record ID | marc_columbia/Columbia-extract-20221130-006.mrc:61629451:5223 |
Source | marc_columbia |
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LEADER: 05223fam a22004694a 4500
001 2551504
005 20221012192850.0
008 990816s2000 nyua 001 0 eng
010 $a 99045513
020 $a0521661803 (hardback)
020 $a0521666279 (paperback)
035 $a(OCoLC)507020891
035 $a(OCoLC)ocn507020891
035 $9AQN6358CU
035 $a(NNC)2551504
035 $a2551504
040 $aDLC$cDLC$dNNC$dOrLoB-B
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043 $ae-uk---
050 00 $aJN175$b.C58 2000
082 00 $a320.941$221
100 1 $aClark, J. C. D.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/names/n81049764
245 10 $aEnglish society, 1660-1832 :$breligion, ideology, and politics during the ancien regime /$cJ.C.D. Clark.
260 $aNew York :$bCambridge University Press,$c2000.
263 $a0003
300 $axii, 580 pages :$billustrations ;$c25 cm
336 $atext$btxt$2rdacontent
337 $aunmediated$bn$2rdamedia
500 $aRev. ed. of: English society, 1688-1832. 1985.
500 $aIncludes index.
505 00 $tIntroduction: The Nature of the Old Order.$gI.$tThe transition to modernity.$gII.$tConstructing the ancien regime.$gIII.$tThe confessional state.$gIV.$tCharacterising English society.$gV.$tNational identities --$g1.$tFrom Restoration to Reconciliation, 1660-1760.$gI.$tThe long shadow of a war of religion.$gII.$tThe definition of a new order.$gIII.$tChurch before State: the Revolution of 1688.$gIV.$tThe division of the middle ground: why all sides appealed to divine right.$gV.$tThe transformation of divine right ideology, 1745-1760 --$g2.$tThe Social and Ideological Premises of the Old Order.$gI.$tWhy assumptions were interrelated.$gII.$tThe canon of political theory and its contexts, Locke to Mill.$gIII.$tClass, gender and the critique of a hierarchical society.$gIV.$tPoliteness, consumerism and the social theory of the elite --$g3.$tNational Identity: The Matrix of Church and State, 1760-1815.$gI.$tWhy the English increasingly defined their state as a monarchy in the age of republican revolution.
505 80 $gII.$tThe state as monarchy: how constitutional controversy focused on the sovereign from Blackstone to Holland House.$gIII.$tThe state as Anglican ascendancy: why political theology remained so important, 1760-1793.$gIV.$tWhy Methodism and Evangelicalism sustained the hegemony of Anglican political theology, 1760-1832.$gV.$tThe strange rebirth of Anglican hegemony, 1789-1815 --$g4.$tBefore Radicalism: The Religious Origins of Disaffection, 1688-1800.$gI.$tWhy were men alienated from the old society?$gII.$tSome theoretical roots of alienation: Deism, Arianism, Socinianism.$gIII.$tTheological heterodoxy and the structures of government.$gIV.$tThe failure of heterodoxy, 1714-1754.$gV.$tJohn Wilkes and the revival of heterodoxy in the Church of England, 1745-1774.$gVI.$tDissent and its aims, 1714-1775.$gVII.$tThe negation of theocratic authority: Thomas Paine.$gVIII.$tThe origins of democratic theory: Richard Price, Joseph Priestley and William Godwin.
505 80 $gIX.$t'The religion of Europe': the resurgence of heterodoxy, 1772-1800 --$g5.$tThe Old Order on the Eve of its Demise: Slow Erosion.$gI.$tThe ideology of the old society.$gII.$tThe impact of the industrial revolution.$gIII.$tDemocracy, demography, Dissent.$gIV.$tFrom 'Radical reform' to 'radicalism': the framing of a new critique --$g6.$tThe End of the Protestant Constitution, 1800-1832: Sudden Collapse.$gI.$tFrom the ancient constitution to the Protestant constitution.$gII.$tWhy reform was not seen as inevitable, 1800-1815.$gIII.$tThe defence of the Protestant constitution, 1815-1827.$gIV.$t'A revolution gradually accomplished', 1827-1832.$gV.$t'The supreme debate': consequences of the Reform Act.
520 1 $a"This is a revised and extensively rewritten version of a work first published in 1985 as English Society 1688-1832. That book came at the opening of new phase in English historiography which questioned much of the received picture of English society as secular, modernising, contractarian and middle class; it began the recovery of the 'long eighteenth century', the period which saw a state form defined by the close relationship of monarchy, aristocracy and church.
520 8 $aIn particular, it placed religion at the centre of social and intellectual life, and used ecclesiastical history to illuminate many historical themes more commonly examined in a secular framework. In its different and updated form, this book reinforces these theses with new evidence, and extends its arguments into fresh areas of enquiry."--BOOK JACKET.
651 0 $aGreat Britain$xPolitics and government$y1660-1714.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056897
651 0 $aGreat Britain$xPolitics and government$y18th century.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056900
651 0 $aGreat Britain$xPolitics and government$y1800-1837.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056910
651 0 $aGreat Britain$xSocial conditions.$0http://id.loc.gov/authorities/subjects/sh85056940
700 1 $aClark, J. C. D.$tEnglish society, 1688-1832.
852 00 $bglx$hJN175$i.C58 2000
852 00 $bbar$hJN175$i.C58 2000