The world turned upside down : radical ideas during the English Revolution / by Christopher Hill.
Material type:
- 0670789755
- 914.2/03/62
- DA 380 .H53 1972
Item type | Current library | Call number | Status | Notes | Barcode | |
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Niebyl-Proctor Marxist Library General Stacks | DA 380 .H53 1972 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) | Not For Loan | This book is signed by the author. | NPML21080015 |
Includes index.
1. Introduction -- 2. The parchment and the fire -- 3. Masterless men -- 4. Agitators and officers -- 5. The north and the west -- 6. A nation of prophets -- 7. Levellers and true Levellers -- 8. Sin and hell -- 9. Seekers and Ranters -- 10. Ranters and Quakers -- 11. Samuel Fisher and the bible -- 12. John Warr -- 13. The island of great Bedlam -- 14. Mechanic preachers and the mechanical philosophy -- 15. Base impudent kisses -- 16. Life against death -- 17. The world restored -- 18. Conclusion -- Appendices : 1. Hobbes and Winstanley: Reason and politics -- 2. Milton and Bunyan: Dialogue with the Radicals.
"Within the English Revolution of the mid-seventeenth century which resulted in the triumph of the protestant ethic—the ideology of the propertied class—there threatened another, quite different, revolution. Its success “might have established communal property, a far wider democracy in political and legal institutions, might have disestablished the state church and rejected the protestant ethic.” In The World Turned Upside Down Christopher Hill studies the beliefs of such radical groups as the Diggers, the Ranters, the Levellers, and others, and the social and emotional impulses that gave rise to them. The relations between rich and poor classes, the part played by wandering “master-less” men, the outbursts of sexual freedom and deliberate blasphemy, the great imaginative creations of Milton and Bunyan—these and many other elements build up into a marvelously detailed and coherent portrait of this strange, sudden effusion of revolutionary beliefs. It is a portrait not of the bourgeois revolution that actually took place but of the impulse towards a far more fundamental overturning of society." -- From Amazon.
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