
Contents
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Radical Vision and Social Activism Radical Vision and Social Activism
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Winstanley's Religious Radicalism Winstanley's Religious Radicalism
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Visionary Myth‐Making: Winstanley's Radical Uses of the Bible Visionary Myth‐Making: Winstanley's Radical Uses of the Bible
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Notes Notes
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Works Cited Works Cited
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17 Gerrard Winstanley and the Diggers
Get accessDavid Loewenstein is Helen C. White Professor of English and the Humanities at the University of Wisconsin‐Madison. His publications include Representing Revolution in Milton and his Contemporaries: Religion, Politics, and Polemics in Radical Puritanism (2001), winner of the Milton Society of America's James Holly Hanford Award for Distinguished Book. He is co‐editor of The Cambridge History of Early Modern English Literature (2002) and The Complete Works of Gerrard Winstanley (2009). He is an Honored Scholar of the Milton Society of America.
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Published:28 January 2013
Cite
Abstract
Gerrard Winstanley (1609–76), leader of the experimental agrarian communist group known as the Diggers, was one of the most original radical religious writers and social thinkers of the English Revolution, and indeed of early modern England. Between 1648 and 1652, at the height of the English Revolution, he composed and published all his major works: more than twenty pamphlets, letters, and broadsides, including his major utopian text The Law of Freedom in a Platform: or, True Magistracy Restored (1652). This article examines what makes Winstanley a particularly distinctive and powerful radical writer and thinker of the English Revolution. It suggest that his extraordinary achievements as a writer are best understood from an interdisciplinary perspective that highlights interconnections among the social, religious, political, and literary dimensions of his works.
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