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 Return of Charles II (Stuart) after “Interregnum” of
Cromwell family, during which country run by
puritans or “dissenters”
 Anglican bishops -> not tolerant of dissent
 Test ACT
 Anti-catholicism
 James II – catholic - ousted
 Bloodless Revolution (William of Orange, Mary)
 Jacobites – esp. in Scotland
 Succession settled on German Sophia, Electress of Hanover
and her descendents (granddaughter of James I)
 War of Spanish Succession (1702)
 Rivals weakened
 Tensions between old and new money
 Continuous fight
 Whigs,
 tolerated dissenters;
 supported new moneyed interests (bankers, etc.);
 centralized government
 Tories,
 supported monarchy,
 established church,
 affirmed land ownership as proper basis of wealth,
 suspicious of centralized government that rewarded
followers with wealth
 First prime ministers (Walpole and Pitt) expand
British power and commerce overseas
 Britain becomes colonial power, ruling Canada and
India, though they lose American colonies.
 Slave trade enriches nation; opposition to slavery
widespread by both Anglicans and Methodists
 Great wealth does not spread to poor; women
remain disenfranchised
 1780 London riots turn the poor (Catholic and
Protestant) against each other
 Popular king George has 60-year rule, but inherited
madness increasingly harms rule
 Fear of radicals who call for new democracy
contributes to British reaction against French
revolution
 All anxious to avoid strife of 1640-60
 All dogma unpopular: puritan enthusiasm, papal
infallibility, divine right of kings, modern Cartesian
philosophy
 Pursuit of absolute certainty is “vain, mad, and
socially calamitous.”
 For religious people and cynics, faith can take up
where reason and sensory evidence fails
 New theories: Hobbes supports absolute
government because of scientific theory of matter
in motion: human desire for power leads to “state of
war”
 Atomic theory
 Advancement of empirical study by careful,
systematic observation is the great contribution of
18th
c. England to the world
 Natural history (collection & description of natural
facts) & Natural philosophy (study of those facts)
 Microscope and telescope expand complexity of
universe
 Aphra Behn translates Fontenelle’s “Conversation
on the Plurality of Worlds” suggesting alternate
universes
 Exploration and colonization increase apetite for
“wondrous facts” about new flora
 Discovery of electricity led to fashionable
experiments with electrocution
 Matthew Boulton creates first factories
powered by steam engines
 Chemistry allowed new market by
Wedgewood in domestic porcelain
 Newton’s discoveries suggest “universal order in
creation” created by God like watchmaker and
watch
 Encounter with other non-Christian peoples led
to “universal” religious tenets that could be
embraced by rational beings
 Deism: Reason recognizes goodness and
wisdom of God and natural law; no need for
mystery or bible
 Deism’s God winds world like a watch and then
withdraws. American Founders like Ben Franklin
embraced Deism, which seemed like a better
foundation for new nation than religious division
 Berkeley: we know the world only through our
senses; we cannot prove that material things exist;
reliance on faith
 Hume: causes and effects are discernable by
experience, not reason
 Locke examines “limits of human understanding” to
help us avoid wasting time with things that exceed
our comprehension
 Mary Astell argued for women’s educational
institutions and criticized marital violence;
mocks Locke’s insistence on political rights
for men only.
 Richard Steele and others advocates
improvement in women’s education and
“sociability.”
 Methodism—evangelical sect promoted by
John Wesley et al, preached salvation
through faith, not works (unlike Anglicans)
 New emphasis on individual and personal
God: diary keeping, letter writing, and novel
“all testify to importance of private,
individual life”
 Government licensing relaxed and replaced by laws
against sedition, libel, obscenity, and treason
 Stage licensing remained; all but two royal theatres
closed down
 Copyright vested with publishers and authors begin
to profit by subscription; Pope earns 5000 pounds
for Iliad translation
 Stamp acts allowed taxation of newspapers; put
some out of business but others thrived
 Market also appealed to literary elite; few now
wrote without pay
 Subscription allowed new wealth but also helped
women’s writing, which otherwise had trouble
finding publishers
 Mostly wealthy or middle class, but some poor
authors made it into print, e.g. Mary Collier’s “The
Woman’s Labor”
 Increase in literacy (male literacy as much as 75% by end
of period, perhaps 25% for women; literacy mostly
urban and surrounded the bible)
 Women were barred from universities; all were self-
educated
 Aristocratic women published widely, especially poems
 Some “scandalous” writers of popular stories of sex,
satire, seduction were denounced by men as immoral
Pope’s Dunciad depicts pissing contest of “scurrilous
male booksellers” won by Eliza Haywood
 Bluestockings: intellectual women who favored moral
literature, esp novels about young women approaching
marriage
 Books were still too expensive for laborers, as were
lending libraries
 Poor sometimes taught to read as a religious
activity by aristocratic masters
 Patrons interested in letters, travel literature, and
novels
 Change of printing: capitalization reserved for
proper names instead of nouns; fewer italics for
emphasis suggests more sophisticated reading
public
 New interest in “nature”—external nature of
landscapes; human nature’s “enduring, universal
truths”
 Study of the ancients seemed synonymous with
study of nature: combine method with wit, and
judgment with fancy

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1 restoration period

  • 1.
  • 2.  Return of Charles II (Stuart) after “Interregnum” of Cromwell family, during which country run by puritans or “dissenters”  Anglican bishops -> not tolerant of dissent  Test ACT  Anti-catholicism
  • 3.  James II – catholic - ousted  Bloodless Revolution (William of Orange, Mary)  Jacobites – esp. in Scotland  Succession settled on German Sophia, Electress of Hanover and her descendents (granddaughter of James I)
  • 4.  War of Spanish Succession (1702)  Rivals weakened  Tensions between old and new money
  • 5.  Continuous fight  Whigs,  tolerated dissenters;  supported new moneyed interests (bankers, etc.);  centralized government  Tories,  supported monarchy,  established church,  affirmed land ownership as proper basis of wealth,  suspicious of centralized government that rewarded followers with wealth
  • 6.  First prime ministers (Walpole and Pitt) expand British power and commerce overseas  Britain becomes colonial power, ruling Canada and India, though they lose American colonies.  Slave trade enriches nation; opposition to slavery widespread by both Anglicans and Methodists
  • 7.  Great wealth does not spread to poor; women remain disenfranchised  1780 London riots turn the poor (Catholic and Protestant) against each other  Popular king George has 60-year rule, but inherited madness increasingly harms rule  Fear of radicals who call for new democracy contributes to British reaction against French revolution
  • 8.  All anxious to avoid strife of 1640-60  All dogma unpopular: puritan enthusiasm, papal infallibility, divine right of kings, modern Cartesian philosophy  Pursuit of absolute certainty is “vain, mad, and socially calamitous.”  For religious people and cynics, faith can take up where reason and sensory evidence fails
  • 9.  New theories: Hobbes supports absolute government because of scientific theory of matter in motion: human desire for power leads to “state of war”  Atomic theory  Advancement of empirical study by careful, systematic observation is the great contribution of 18th c. England to the world
  • 10.  Natural history (collection & description of natural facts) & Natural philosophy (study of those facts)  Microscope and telescope expand complexity of universe  Aphra Behn translates Fontenelle’s “Conversation on the Plurality of Worlds” suggesting alternate universes  Exploration and colonization increase apetite for “wondrous facts” about new flora
  • 11.  Discovery of electricity led to fashionable experiments with electrocution  Matthew Boulton creates first factories powered by steam engines  Chemistry allowed new market by Wedgewood in domestic porcelain
  • 12.  Newton’s discoveries suggest “universal order in creation” created by God like watchmaker and watch  Encounter with other non-Christian peoples led to “universal” religious tenets that could be embraced by rational beings  Deism: Reason recognizes goodness and wisdom of God and natural law; no need for mystery or bible  Deism’s God winds world like a watch and then withdraws. American Founders like Ben Franklin embraced Deism, which seemed like a better foundation for new nation than religious division
  • 13.  Berkeley: we know the world only through our senses; we cannot prove that material things exist; reliance on faith  Hume: causes and effects are discernable by experience, not reason  Locke examines “limits of human understanding” to help us avoid wasting time with things that exceed our comprehension
  • 14.  Mary Astell argued for women’s educational institutions and criticized marital violence; mocks Locke’s insistence on political rights for men only.  Richard Steele and others advocates improvement in women’s education and “sociability.”
  • 15.  Methodism—evangelical sect promoted by John Wesley et al, preached salvation through faith, not works (unlike Anglicans)  New emphasis on individual and personal God: diary keeping, letter writing, and novel “all testify to importance of private, individual life”
  • 16.  Government licensing relaxed and replaced by laws against sedition, libel, obscenity, and treason  Stage licensing remained; all but two royal theatres closed down  Copyright vested with publishers and authors begin to profit by subscription; Pope earns 5000 pounds for Iliad translation  Stamp acts allowed taxation of newspapers; put some out of business but others thrived
  • 17.  Market also appealed to literary elite; few now wrote without pay  Subscription allowed new wealth but also helped women’s writing, which otherwise had trouble finding publishers  Mostly wealthy or middle class, but some poor authors made it into print, e.g. Mary Collier’s “The Woman’s Labor”
  • 18.  Increase in literacy (male literacy as much as 75% by end of period, perhaps 25% for women; literacy mostly urban and surrounded the bible)  Women were barred from universities; all were self- educated  Aristocratic women published widely, especially poems  Some “scandalous” writers of popular stories of sex, satire, seduction were denounced by men as immoral Pope’s Dunciad depicts pissing contest of “scurrilous male booksellers” won by Eliza Haywood  Bluestockings: intellectual women who favored moral literature, esp novels about young women approaching marriage
  • 19.  Books were still too expensive for laborers, as were lending libraries  Poor sometimes taught to read as a religious activity by aristocratic masters  Patrons interested in letters, travel literature, and novels  Change of printing: capitalization reserved for proper names instead of nouns; fewer italics for emphasis suggests more sophisticated reading public
  • 20.  New interest in “nature”—external nature of landscapes; human nature’s “enduring, universal truths”  Study of the ancients seemed synonymous with study of nature: combine method with wit, and judgment with fancy