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The Restoration Newspaper and its Development
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  • Cited by 16
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    Raymond, Joad 2017. A Companion to Literature from Milton to Blake. p. 481.

    Peacey, Jason 2016. Managing Dutch Advices. Media History, Vol. 22, Issue. 3-4, p. 421.

    Walker, Brian and McIntyre, Dan 2015. Corpora and Discourse Studies. p. 175.

    Reitemeier, Arnd 2015. Umwelten. p. 391.

    Peacey, Jason 2012. EDITING AND EDITORIAL INTERVENTIONS IN ENGLISH JOURNALISM FROM THE CIVIL WARS TO THE RESTORATION. Media History, Vol. 18, Issue. 3-4, p. 259.

    Dawson, Mark S. 2011. First Impressions: Newspaper Advertisements and Early Modern English Body Imaging, 1651–1750. The Journal of British Studies, Vol. 50, Issue. 02, p. 277.

    Turner, David M. 2010. The Extraordinary and the Everyday in Early Modern England. p. 86.

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    Raymond, Joad 1998. Introduction: Newspapers, forgeries, and histories. Prose Studies, Vol. 21, Issue. 2, p. 1.

    Raymond, Joad 1998. The newspaper, public opinion, and the public sphere in the seventeenth century. Prose Studies, Vol. 21, Issue. 2, p. 109.

    Backscheider, Paula R. 1996. Daniel Defoe and early modern intelligence. Intelligence and National Security, Vol. 11, Issue. 1, p. 1.

    Leth, Göran 1993. A protestant public sphere: The early European newspaper press. Studies in Newspaper and Periodical History, Vol. 1, Issue. 1-2, p. 67.

    Browne, Stephen H. 1992. Satirizing women's speech in eighteenth‐century England. Rhetoric Society Quarterly, Vol. 22, Issue. 3, p. 20.

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    The Restoration Newspaper and its Development
    • Online ISBN: 9780511552908
    • Book DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/CBO9780511552908
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Book description

This book is a major survey of the English newspaper and the way it developed from 1660 to the early eighteenth century, a crucial period in its long history. Professor Sutherland's approach is comprehensive and topics covered include: the administration of newspapers, their sources of information, the reliability of reporting, the contributions of country and foreign correspondents, and the extent to which papers were able to print political news and express political opinions in a period of government repression. A final chapter provides an account of the chaotic and often dangerous lives of newspaper men and women. The emphasis throughout falls on how much was actually achieved in difficult circumstances, and how often modern developments were anticipated. This will be a useful work of reference for scholars of seventeenth- and eighteenth-century literature, as well as for political and social historians.

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