|Wystawione w kategorii:
Masz taki przedmiot na sprzedaż?

Teatr Stanu : Parlament i kultura polityczna we wczesnej Stuart Anglii, ...

Tekst oryginalny
Theater of State : Parliament and Political Culture in Early Stuart England, ...
Stan:
Jak nowa
Dostępne: 2
Cena:
US $95,71
Około386,47 zł
Wysyłka:
Bezpłatnie Economy Shipping. Zobacz szczegółydla wysyłki
Znajduje się w: Jessup, Maryland, Stany Zjednoczone
Dostawa:
Szacowana między Pt, 10 maj a Śr, 15 maj do 43230
Czas dostawy jest szacowany naszą metodą na podstawie odległości między kupującym a lokalizacją przedmiotu, wybranej usługi wysyłkowej, historii wysyłek sprzedawcy i innych czynników. Czasy dostawy mogą się różnić, szczególnie w okresach największego ruchu.
Zwroty:
Zwrot w ciągu 14 dni. Za wysyłkę zwrotną płaci kupujący. Zobacz szczegóły- aby uzyskać więcej informacji dotyczących zwrotów
Płatności:
     

Kupuj bez obaw

Gwarancja zwrotu pieniędzy eBay
Otrzymasz przedmiot, jaki zamawiasz, albo zwrot pieniędzy. 

Informacje o sprzedawcy

Zarejestrowany jako sprzedawca-firma
Sprzedawca ponosi pełną odpowiedzialność za wystawienie tej oferty sprzedaży.
Nr przedmiotu eBay: 364213607070
Ostatnia aktualizacja: 22-04-2024 09:47:01 CEST Wyświetl wszystkie poprawkiWyświetl wszystkie poprawki

Parametry przedmiotu

Stan
Jak nowa: Książka wygląda jak nowa choć była czytana. Egzemplarz bez brakujących lub uszkodzonych ...
Book Title
Theater of State : Parliament and Political Culture in Early Stua
ISBN
9780804752886
Publication Year
2012
Type
Textbook
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Publication Name
Theater of State : Parliament and Political Culture in Early Stuart England
Item Height
0.6in
Author
Chris Kyle
Item Length
9in
Publisher
Stanford University Press
Item Width
6in
Item Weight
23.5 Oz
Number of Pages
288 Pages

O tym produkcie

Product Information

This book chronicles the expansion and creation of new public spheres in and around Parliament in the early Stuart period. It focuses on two closely interconnected narratives: the changing nature of communication and discourse within parliamentary chambers and the interaction of Parliament with the wider world of political dialogue and the dissemination of information. Concentrating on the rapidly changing practices of Parliament in print culture, rhetorical strategy, and lobbying during the 1620s, this book demonstrates that Parliament not only moved toward the center stage of politics but also became the center of the post-Reformation public sphere. Theater of State begins by examining the noise of politics inside Parliament, arguing that the House of Commons increasingly became a place of noisy, hotly contested speech. It then turns to the material conditions of note-taking in Parliament and how and the public became aware of parliamentary debates. The book concludes by examining practices of lobbying, intersections of the public with Parliament within Westminster Palace, and Parliament's expanding print culture. The author argues overall that the Crown dispensed with Parliament because it was too powerful and too popular.

Product Identifiers

Publisher
Stanford University Press
ISBN-10
0804752885
ISBN-13
9780804752886
eBay Product ID (ePID)
111141485

Product Key Features

Author
Chris Kyle
Publication Name
Theater of State : Parliament and Political Culture in Early Stuart England
Format
Hardcover
Language
English
Publication Year
2012
Type
Textbook
Number of Pages
288 Pages

Dimensions

Item Length
9in
Item Height
0.6in
Item Width
6in
Item Weight
23.5 Oz

Additional Product Features

Lc Classification Number
Jn534
Reviews
"Chris Kyle illuminates for us a much broader portrait of parliament, especially by bringing to life the character of the sessions and the nature of the environment in which the houses met."— Seventeenth-Century News, "Concise and well written, the volume makes a contribution to the political atmosphere that provided the context for the destruction of trust in 1640. It was theater in one sense, but it had real consequences."--Richard Cosgrove, University of Arizona, Journal of British Studies "This graciously written synthesis of the growing interaction between Parliament and the public sphere will prove to be a useful book for scholars interested in the institutional and cultural worlds of politics and print in early seventeenth-centruy England. It is particularly valuable for the meticulous annotation and full bibliography that provide the reader with ready access to all of the archival and printed primary materials of the period as well as to relevant secondary works."--Maija Jansson, Yale University, Renaissance Quarterly "Kyle concludes that during its eight sessions in 1621-29, Parliament became too powerful and too popular for Charles I. . . . Kyle's somewhat controversial conclusions are thoroughly researched and vigorously argued. Summing Up: Recommended."--R. Fritze, CHOICE "Kyle frames the demotics, theatrics, and staging of parliamentary speech in terms of the history of communication. No account of early modern politics will be complete without reference to the murmuring, hissing, shouting, and silences that this books reveals."--David Cressy, The Ohio State University "Kyle will wake everyone up. He has an inspired idea of setting parliamentary history firmly within contemporary political culture, arguably the most influential mode of scholarly analysis in the period. This book could well transform the field."--Thomas Cogswell, University of California, Riverside, "Kyle concludes that during its eight sessions in 1621-29, Parliament became too powerful and too popular for Charles I. . . . Kyle's somewhat controversial conclusions are thoroughly researched and vigorously argued. Summing Up: Recommended."-R. Fritze, CHOICE, "This graciously written synthesis of the growing interaction between Parliament and the public sphere will prove to be a useful book for scholars interested in the institutional and cultural worlds of politics and print in early seventeenth-centruy England. It is particularly valuable for the meticulous annotation and full bibliography that provide the reader with ready access to all of the archival and printed primary materials of the period as well as to relevant secondary works."-Maija Jansson, Yale University, Renaissance Quarterly, "Concise and well written, the volume makes a contribution to the political atmosphere that provided the context for the destruction of trust in 1640. It was theater in one sense, but it had real consequences."—Richard Cosgrove, University of Arizona, Journal of British Studies, "The picture of Parliament that emerges from Kyle's study is one of a robust institution taking on new functions and responsiblities, and despite (or because of) conflict with the Crown, deeply engaged with a public that eagerly followed its affairs."-Robert Zaller, Law and History Review, "In cleverly framing his study, Kyle gives himself every chance to write a new and substantial account of early Stuart parliaments that are fully contextualized in contemporary metropolitan culture . . . Kyle's fine empirical work is suggestive of a host of processes that explain the transforming and transformative role of parliament in English society"—Phil Withington, American Historical Review, "Kyle will wake everyone up. He has an inspired idea of setting parliamentary history firmly within contemporary political culture, arguably the most influential mode of scholarly analysis in the period. This book could well transform the field."—Thomas Cogswell, University of California, Riverside, "The picture of Parliament that emerges from Kyle's study is one of a robust institution taking on new functions and responsiblities, and despite (or because of) conflict with the Crown, deeply engaged with a public that eagerly followed its affairs."—Robert Zaller, Law and History Review, "Chris Kyle illuminates for us a much broader portrait of parliament, especially by bringing to life the character of the sessions and the nature of the environment in which the houses met."-- Seventeenth-Century News, "This graciously written synthesis of the growing interaction between Parliament and the public sphere will prove to be a useful book for scholars interested in the institutional and cultural worlds of politics and print in early seventeenth-centruy England. It is particularly valuable for the meticulous annotation and full bibliography that provide the reader with ready access to all of the archival and printed primary materials of the period as well as to relevant secondary works."—Maija Jansson, Yale University, Renaissance Quarterly, "In cleverly framing his study, Kyle gives himself every chance to write a new and substantial account of early Stuart parliaments that are fully contextualized in contemporary metropolitan culture . . . Kyle's fine empirical work is suggestive of a host of processes that explain the transforming and transformative role of parliament in English society"--Phil Withington, American Historical Review, "The picture of Parliament that emerges from Kyle's study is one of a robust institution taking on new functions and responsiblities, and despite (or because of) conflict with the Crown, deeply engaged with a public that eagerly followed its affairs."--Robert Zaller, Law and History Review, "This graciously written synthesis of the growing interaction between Parliament and the public sphere will prove to be a useful book for scholars interested in the institutional and cultural worlds of politics and print in early seventeenth-centruy England. It is particularly valuable for the meticulous annotation and full bibliography that provide the reader with ready access to all of the archival and printed primary materials of the period as well as to relevant secondary works."--Maija Jansson, Yale University, Renaissance Quarterly, "Chris Kyle illuminates for us a much broader portrait of parliament, especially by bringing to life the character of the sessions and the nature of the environment in which the houses met."- Seventeenth-Century News, "This study is a very major effort to reassemble the culture of parliamentary politics in a way that is historically and historiographically innovatory and welcome."--Michael Questier, The Journal of Modern History, "This graciously written synthesis of the growing interaction between Parliament and the public sphere will prove to be a useful book for scholars interested in the institutional and cultural worlds of politics and print in early seventeenth-centruy England. It is particularly valuable for the meticulous annotation and full bibliography that provide the reader with ready access to all of the archival and printed primary materials of the period as well as to relevant secondary works."--Maija Jansson, Yale University, Renaissance Quarterly "Kyle concludes that during its eight sessions in 1621-29, Parliament became too powerful and too popular for Charles I. . . . Kyle's somewhat controversial conclusions are thoroughly researched and vigorously argued. Summing Up: Recommended."--R. Fritze, CHOICE "Kyle frames the demotics, theatrics, and staging of parliamentary speech in terms of the history of communication. No account of early modern politics will be complete without reference to the murmuring, hissing, shouting, and silences that this books reveals."--David Cressy, The Ohio State University "Kyle will wake everyone up. He has an inspired idea of setting parliamentary history firmly within contemporary political culture, arguably the most influential mode of scholarly analysis in the period. This book could well transform the field."--Thomas Cogswell, University of California, Riverside, "Concise and well written, the volume makes a contribution to the political atmosphere that provided the context for the destruction of trust in 1640. It was theater in one sense, but it had real consequences."-Richard Cosgrove, University of Arizona, Journal of British Studies, "Kyle frames the demotics, theatrics, and staging of parliamentary speech in terms of the history of communication. No account of early modern politics will be complete without reference to the murmuring, hissing, shouting, and silences that this books reveals."—David Cressy, The Ohio State University, "Concise and well written, the volume makes a contribution to the political atmosphere that provided the context for the destruction of trust in 1640. It was theater in one sense, but it had real consequences."--Richard Cosgrove, University of Arizona, Journal of British Studies
Copyright Date
2012
Topic
Political Process / General, Europe / Great Britain / Stuart Era (1603-1714), General, World / European, Europe / Great Britain / General
Lccn
2011-032091
Dewey Decimal
306.20941/09032
Intended Audience
Scholarly & Professional
Dewey Edition
23
Genre
History, Political Science

Opis przedmiotu podany przez sprzedawcę

Informacje o firmie

Expert Trading Limited
John Boyer
9220 Rumsey Rd
Ste 101
21045-1956 Columbia, MD
United States
Pokaż informacje kontaktowe
:liam-Emoc.secirpkoobtaerg@sredroyabe
Oświadczam, że wszystkie moje działania związane ze sprzedażą będą zgodne z wszystkimi przepisami i regulacjami UE.
Great Book Prices Store

Great Book Prices Store

96,8% opinii pozytywnych
Sprzedane przedmioty: 1,2 mln
Zwykle odpowiada w ciągu 24 godzin

Oceny szczegółowe

Średnia z ostatnich 12 miesięcy

Dokładność opisu
4.9
Przystępny koszt wysyłki
5.0
Szybkość wysyłki
4.9
Komunikacja
4.8
Zarejestrowany jako sprzedawca-firma

Opinie sprzedawców (339 862)

0***7 (149)- Opinie wystawione przez kupującego.
Ostatni miesiąc
Zakup potwierdzony
As described
g***l (281)- Opinie wystawione przez kupującego.
Ostatni miesiąc
Zakup potwierdzony
Great Ebayer!!!
o***4 (1)- Opinie wystawione przez kupującego.
Ostatni miesiąc
Zakup potwierdzony
Took longer than usual but item was in excellent condition.