Show Summary Details
- Title Pages
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
-
Chapter 1 Freedom of speech in England and the anglophone world, 1500–1850 -
Chapter 2 Thomas Elyot on counsel, kairos and freeing speech in Tudor England -
Chapter 3 Pearls before swine: limiting godly speech in early seventeenth-century England -
Chapter 4 ‘Free speech’ in Elizabethan and early Stuart England -
Chapter 5 The origins of the concept of freedom of the press -
Chapter 6 Swift and free speech -
Chapter 7 Defending the truth: arguments for free speech and their limits in early eighteenth-century Britain and France -
Chapter 8 ‘The warr … against heaven by blasphemors and infidels’: prosecuting heresy in Enlightenment England -
Chapter 9 David Hume and ‘Of The Liberty of the Press’ (1741) in its Original Contexts1 -
Chapter 10 The argument for freedom of speech and press during the ratification of the US Constitution, 1787–88 -
Chapter 11 Before – and beyond – On Liberty: Samuel Bailey and the nineteenth-century theory of free speech -
Chapter 12 Unfree, unequal, unempirical: press freedom, British India and Mill’s theory of the public - Index
(p.xi) Abbreviations
(p.xi) Abbreviations
- Source:
- Freedom of speech, 1500-1850
- Author(s):
- Robert G. Ingram, Jason Peacey, Alex W. Barber
- Publisher:
- Manchester University Press
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- Title Pages
- Notes on contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
-
Chapter 1 Freedom of speech in England and the anglophone world, 1500–1850 -
Chapter 2 Thomas Elyot on counsel, kairos and freeing speech in Tudor England -
Chapter 3 Pearls before swine: limiting godly speech in early seventeenth-century England -
Chapter 4 ‘Free speech’ in Elizabethan and early Stuart England -
Chapter 5 The origins of the concept of freedom of the press -
Chapter 6 Swift and free speech -
Chapter 7 Defending the truth: arguments for free speech and their limits in early eighteenth-century Britain and France -
Chapter 8 ‘The warr … against heaven by blasphemors and infidels’: prosecuting heresy in Enlightenment England -
Chapter 9 David Hume and ‘Of The Liberty of the Press’ (1741) in its Original Contexts1 -
Chapter 10 The argument for freedom of speech and press during the ratification of the US Constitution, 1787–88 -
Chapter 11 Before – and beyond – On Liberty: Samuel Bailey and the nineteenth-century theory of free speech -
Chapter 12 Unfree, unequal, unempirical: press freedom, British India and Mill’s theory of the public - Index