Scottish Public Opinion and the Anglo-Scottish Union, 1699-1707
Karin Bowie
In the early modern period, ordinary subjects began to find a role in national politics through the phenomenon of public opinion: by drawing on entrenched ideological differences, oppositional leaders were able to recruit popular support to pressure the government with claimed representations of a national interest. This is particularly well demonstrated in the case of the Anglo-Scottish union crisis of 1699-1707, in which Country party leaders encouraged remarkable levels of participation by non-elite Scots. Though dominant accounts of this crisis portray Scottish opinion as impotent in the face of Court party corruption, this book demonstrates the significance of public opinion in the political process: from the Darien crisis of 1699-1701 to the incorporation debates of 1706-7, the Country party aggressively employed pamphlets, petitions and crowds to influence political outcomes. The government's changing response to these adversarial activities further indicates their rising influence. By revealing the ways in which public opinion in Scotland shaped the union crisis from beginning to end, this book explores the power and limits of public opinion in the early modern public sphere and revises understanding of the making of the British union.
Dr KARIN BOWIE lectures in History at the University of Glasgow. | |
DETAILS
208 pages Size: 23.4 x 15.6 cm 13 digit ISBN: 9780861932894
Binding: Hardback First published: 17/May/2007 Price: 95.00 USD / 50.00 GBP
Imprint: Royal Historical Society Series: Royal Historical Society Studies in History New Series
Subject: Modern History
BIC class: HBCR
STATUS: Print on demand (please allow 3 weeks for delivery)
Details updated on 18/11/2008
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Contents
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Introduction
| 1 | |
Politics and Communications in post-Revolution Scotland
| 2 | |
Oppositional opinion politics
| 3 | |
The government and public opinion
| 4 | |
Public discourse on the Union, 1699-1705
| 5 | |
Public discourse on the Union treaty
| 6 | |
Addresses against the treaty
| 7 | |
Crowds and collective resistance to the treaty
| 8 | |
Conclusions: public opinion and the making of the Union of 1707
| 9 | |
Bibliography
| 10 | |
Index
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Reviews
A model of its kind. HISTORY SCOTLAND
In the middle of a radical reappraisal of the road to 1707...Karin Bowie's monograph is among the latest and most original contributions to an improved understanding of that process. [...]
[A] dazzling examination of the mass, extra-parliamentary agitations against incorporating union. [...] A highly original and rigorous examination of the new adversarial opinion politics the Scottish opposition invented in 1699-1707. [...] Only very rarely has a work of history spoken so directly to a nation's present dilemmas and discontents as Bowie's does to ours. PERSPECTIVES Offers a fresh analysis of the relationship between public opinion and the making of the union. [...] It is now the standard text on the text of politics and the Union of 1707. EIGHTEENTH-CENTURY SCOTLAND, Spring 2008 Of the many books on the Union of 1707 that were released in the year of its three hundredth anniversary, Karin Bowie's study of Scottish Public Opinion and the Anglo-Scottish Union stands out as unique. [...] Makes a brave and highly original contribution to two important debates, and it will be of interest to anyone working on either the early modern public sphere or the 1707 Union itself. JOURNAL OF BRITISH STUDIES, July 2008, vol 47, no3
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