
Contents
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Promoting Royal Piety Promoting Royal Piety
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Literature and Elections Literature and Elections
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The Coordination of Tory Propaganda The Coordination of Tory Propaganda
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High Church Rhetoric High Church Rhetoric
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The Whig Campaign The Whig Campaign
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The Shortest-Way with the Dissenters in Context The Shortest-Way with the Dissenters in Context
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5 Elections and the Church of England
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Published:November 2017
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Abstract
Having explored in previous chapters how the circumstances of Anne’s accession affected portrayals of Stuart rule, this chapter turns to the impact of those representations on the general elections. Parliamentary elections in the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries had been largely uncontested. By the start of the eighteenth century elections had become violently partisan. This chapter explores how domestic party politics became entangled with international dynastic and religious matters at a time when the Catholic Stuarts were in exile and the Protestant House of Brunswick beckoned from Hanover. By situating major works such as Clarendon’s History of the Rebellion (1702–4) and Defoe’s The Shortest-Way with the Dissenters (1702) in the midst of these elections, it uncovers rhetorical strategies and meanings that have been lost to recent scholarship.
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