The Literary Culture of Early Stuart Libeling (original) (raw)
The Act of Libel: Conscripting Civic Space in Early Modern England
Andrew Gordon
View PDFchevron_right
Political Satire in Early Stuart England: New Voices, New Narratives
Andrew McRae
Literature Compass, 2004
View PDFchevron_right
“The Dean of St Asaph's trial: libel and politics in the 1780s”, Journal for Eighteenth-Century Studies, 32:1 (2009), pp. 21-35
Page Anthony
View PDFchevron_right
"Play, utopia or anguish" ? Accounting for the persistence of the discourse against slander from the Middle Ages to the early modern period
Sandrine Parageau
Style, 2017
View PDFchevron_right
A Most Learned, Conscientious and Devout Exercise: anti-Cromwellian satire in 1649
Nicholas Poyntz
View PDFchevron_right
Sexual slander and its social context in England, c. 1660-1700, with special reference to Cheshire and Sussex
Dinah Winch
1999
View PDFchevron_right
Royal Newsletters, Forgeries and English Historians: Some Links between Court and History in the Reign of Richard I
John Gillingham
La cour Plantagenet (1154-1204), ed. Martin Aurell, 2000
View PDFchevron_right
The representations of Royalists and Royalism in the press, c. 1637-1646
Paul Jones
2012
View PDFchevron_right
Canonical Defamation in Medieval England
R. H. Helmholz
The American Journal of Legal History, 1971
View PDFchevron_right
Review of Roger D. Lund, Ridicule, Religion and the Politics of Wit in Augustan England
Darryl P Domingo
Eighteenth-Century Fiction, 2014
View PDFchevron_right
The Poet, the Skeptic, His Witches and their Queen: Political Theology and Poetic Charms in Sidney's "Defence." English Literary History, 81.3 (2014): 744-56.
Ethan Guagliardo
English Literary History
View PDFchevron_right
The ‘wits’ who beset Sir Richard Blackmore
Paul W Nash
View PDFchevron_right
Philip Major, review of Censorship and Conflict in Seventeenth-Century England
Randy Robertson
View PDFchevron_right
Reading Gossip in Early Eighteenth-Century England
Claudine van Hensbergen
View PDFchevron_right
A Political Pamphleteer in Late Medieval England: the Merciless Parliament of
Clementine Oliver
New Medieval Liveratures, Volume VI, 2003
View PDFchevron_right
Roasting a Friar, Mis-taking a Wife, and Other Acts of Textual Harassment in Chaucer’s Canterbury Tales
Robert W Hanning
Studies in the Age of Chaucer, 1985
View PDFchevron_right
Sociable Criticism in England, 1625-1725 (co-authored with Prof. Zeynep Tenger)
Paul Trolander
2007
View PDFchevron_right
The voices of royal subjects? Political speech in the judicial and governmental records of fourteenth-century England
Helen Lacey
Anales de la Universidad de Alicante. Historia Medieval, 2017
View PDFchevron_right
Lies, Slander, and Obscenity in Medieval English Literature: Pastoral Rhetoric and the Deviant Speaker.Edwin D. Craun
Kathryn Lynch
Speculum, 1999
View PDFchevron_right
Early Modern Satire and the Bishops' Order of 1599
Bryan Herek
2005
View PDFchevron_right
WAR OF WORDS: THE DISCOURSE OF HATE IN THE EARLY EIGHTEENTH CENTURY ENGLISH NEWSPAPERS
Katarzyna Kozak
Coversatoria Litteraria, 2019
View PDFchevron_right
Joseph Shatzmiller, “Review of ‘The Murder of William of Norwich: The Origins of the Blood Libel in Medieval Europe’, by E.M. Rose,” Journal of British Studies, vol. 57, no. 1 (January 2018): 165-167
Joseph Shatzmiller
View PDFchevron_right
Legal Satire and the Legal Profession in the 1590s (Uncorrected Proofs), Oxford Handbook of English Law and Literature, 1500-1700, Ed. Lorna Hutson (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2017).
Jessica Winston
View PDFchevron_right
The Politics of Libel: Thomas Erskine, Freedom of the Press, and Transatlantic Legal Culture, c. 1780–1830
Nicola Phillips
Law and History Review
View PDFchevron_right
"The 'Snared Subject' and the General Pardon Statute in Late Elizabethan Coterie Literature." Taking Exception to the Law: Materializing Injustice in Early Modern English Literature. Beecher, et al. University of Toronto Press, 2015.
Virginia Lee Strain
View PDFchevron_right
'Defamation, Gender and Hierarchy in Late Medieval Yorkshire', Social History, 43:3 (2018), 356-74.
Bronach Kane
View PDFchevron_right
Slander and the right to be an author in fifteenth-century Spain
Ana M . Gómez-Bravo
Journal of Spanish Cultural Studies
View PDFchevron_right
Scripting Defense: Textual Arguments and their Readers amid the Pursuit of Heresy in England
Fiona Somerset
Nottingham Medieval Studies, 2019
View PDFchevron_right
Vituperation in Early Seventeenth Century Historical Studies
Thomas Conley
Rhetorica, 2004
View PDFchevron_right
'Scandalous' and 'Malignant'? Reasons for the Persecution of Clergy of the Church of England during the 1640s
Michael P Simpson
2021
View PDFchevron_right
Writing About Richard III: Admissible Sources and Emotional Responses
Carole Cusack
Public lecture delivered to the Richard III Society of NSW, 13 February 2010.
View PDFchevron_right
The Oxford Handbook of English Law and Literature, 1500-1700
Lorna Hutson
Oxford Handbooks Online, 2017
View PDFchevron_right
The hare and the drum: Robert Persons's writings on the English Succession, 15936
Victor Houliston
Renaissance Studies, 2000
View PDFchevron_right
The Earl of Essex and Late Elizabethan Political Culture. By Alexandra Gajda. Oxford University Press. 2012. xiv + 293pp. £60.00/$110.00
Kinga Földváry
History, 2014
View PDFchevron_right
Cheaters, Saints, and Simultaneous Narrative: Early and Postmodern Lessons from Thomas More’s The History of Richard III
Christine Hoffmann
College Literature, 2013
View PDFchevron_right