Roger L'Estrange and the Making of Restoration CultureAnne Dunan-Page, Beth Lynch Roger L'Estrange has become something of a leitmotif in the history and literature of the later-17th century. This book suggests that it is only when he is considered through a range of specialist perspectives reflecting his interdisciplinary significance that his importance within the cultural history of the Restoration becomes apparent. |
Contents
Rhetoricating and Identity in LEstranges Early Career 16591662 | 7 |
Roger LEstranges Observator and the Exorcism of the Plot | 69 |
Impostures Trustworthiness and | 89 |
Continental Protestantism | 109 |
The Uses of the Fable in | 131 |
Music in the Life of Roger LEstrange | 149 |
An Annotated Bibliography | 181 |
Select Bibliography of Secondary Sources | 225 |
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accusations advertisement Advice Aesop Answer Apology appeared called Cambridge Catholic century Chapter Charles Church claims collection concerned Content continued copies court Culture death dialogue Directions Dissenters divisions early edition England English evidence example fables February final French further Government hand Henry History House Huguenots Interest issue John king L'Estrange's late later Letter Libels Liberty Library licenser London Lords manuscript March means Milton Morals Narrative Nicholas noted Observator original Oxford pamphlet Parliament play political Popery Popish Plot Prance preface Presbyterians present printed printer Protestants published question reader reference Reformed republican Restoration rhetorical Roger L'Estrange Sayings Second seditious seems short Studies success suggests Third Thomas thought Toleration Tory tracts translation True turned voice volume Whig writing written