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McKeever GL (2016) Sheffield: Print, Protest and Poetry, 1790-1810. BSECS Criticks Reviews [Online Book Review] 25.07.2016. https://www.bsecs.org.uk/criticks-reviews/sheffield-print-protest-and-poetry-1790-1810/
Abstract
First paragraph: ¡®We¡¯re only Swine!¡¯ reiterates the author of ¡®The Observations of a Swine¡¯, published in The Sheffield Register for the 28th June 1793. In a reductio ad absurdum of Edmund Burke¡¯s comment about the ¡®swinish multitude¡¯ three years earlier, the poem travesties British statehood, which is built on the ¡®bristly back¡¯ of ¡®A nasty filthy grunting Breed!¡¯ This furious sarcasm is indicative of the energy of the radical poetry published by the Register under the aegis of Joseph Gales, now resurrected by a digital anthology project based at the University of Sheffield. Aiming to illustrate an important ¡®facet of the city¡¯s identity¡¯, the website updates an important reading experience from the turn of the nineteenth century ¨C one that feels germane in a political climate obsessed by political extremism and definitions of freedom. With the project still in an early phase, the stress is currently on the final year of Gale¡¯s editorship in 1793-4, before he was forced abroad by accusations of ¡®conspiracy against the government¡¯. The paper was then re-founded as The Sheffield Iris by the poet and abolitionist James Montgomery, and the content will grow across this historical narrative. Illustrating the proliferation of radical ideas in Northern England ¨C including religious toleration, opposition to war and the broad terrain of ¡®liberty¡¯ ¨C these sources capture a critical moment in the evolution of British imperial capitalism, as newly integrated networks of exchange played out upon a society still significantly modelled at the regional level.
Type of media | Online Book Review |
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Status | Published |
Funders | |
Publication date online | 25/07/2016 |
Publisher | British Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies |