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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Nicholas RogersPublisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC Imprint: Hambledon Continuum Dimensions: Width: 15.60cm , Height: 1.20cm , Length: 23.40cm Weight: 0.300kg ISBN: 9781852855680ISBN 10: 1852855681 Pages: 184 Publication Date: 04 September 2008 Audience: General/trade , General Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: Manufactured on demand ![]() We will order this item for you from a manufactured on demand supplier. Language: English Table of ContentsIntroduction Impressment and the Law Resisting the Press gang: Trends, Patterns, Dynamics Spotlight on Two Ports: Bristol and Liverpool Manning the Navy in the Mid-century Atlantic The Navy and the Nation, 1793-1820 EpilogueReviewsDetailed and illuminating insight into the world and ways of the press gang Bookseller Buyers Guide Mention -Book News, February 2009 Detailed and illuminating insight into the world and ways of the press gang Bookseller Buyers Guide Mention --Book News, February 2009 Mention Book News, February 2009 The Press Gang was a pleasure to read. Rogers has done his research, consulting a variety of primary sources including Admiralty records, numerous newspapers of the period and pamphlets. He places the press gang and community resistance to their activities in a new light, and challenges the prevailing historiography of British naval history by bringing this story to light. By examining the violent practices of the Navy, and the British government's support of them, Rogers has transcended the prevailing heroic interpretation of naval history. -Donald H. Parkerson, Nautical Research Journal, Vol. 54, June 2009 [Rogers] should be commended for his efforts. This volume reads easily and makes a major contribution to the literature on civil-naval relations. -Keith Mercer, International Journal of Maritime History, Vol. 21, 2009 The great strength of this book is Roger's ability to link impressment, which only a small demographic can define and discuss, to larger social issues...Rogers has done much to illuminate the ways in which human agency constrained the expansion of coercive, government-sponsored military conscription throughout much of the British Atlantic World. He is to be applauded for refusing to yield the human spirit to ubiquitous structural forces associated with legal, political, and military institutions such as impressment. -Christopher P. Magra, The Northern Mariner/Le Marin du Nord, 2009 Mention Book News, February 2009 Mention -Book News, February 2009 Detailed and illuminating insight into the world and ways of the press gang Bookseller Buyers Guide Mention --Book News, February 2009 Mention Book News, February 2009 The Press Gang was a pleasure to read. Rogers has done his research, consulting a variety of primary sources including Admiralty records, numerous newspapers of the period and pamphlets. He places the press gang and community resistance to their activities in a new light, and challenges the prevailing historiography of British naval history by bringing this story to light. By examining the violent practices of the Navy, and the British government's support of them, Rogers has transcended the prevailing heroic interpretation of naval history. -Donald H. Parkerson, Nautical Research Journal, Vol. 54, June 2009 The great strength of this book is Roger's ability to link impressment, which only a small demographic can define and discuss, to larger social issues...Rogers has done much to illuminate the ways in which human agency constrained the expansion of coercive, government-sponsored military conscription throughout much of the British Atlantic World. He is to be applauded for refusing to yield the human spirit to ubiquitous structural forces associated with legal, political, and military institutions such as impressment. -Christopher P. Magra, The Northern Mariner/Le Marin du Nord, 2009 [Rogers] should be commended for his efforts. This volume reads easily and makes a major contribution to the literature on civil-naval relations. -Keith Mercer, International Journal of Maritime History, Vol. 21, 2009 Author InformationNicholas Rogers is a leading expert on the social history of eighteenth-century Britain. He is Professor of History at York University, Toronto and currently Fletcher Jones Foundation Fellow, Huntington Library, California.. His many books include Whigs and Cities: Popular Politics in the Age of Walpole and Pitt and Crowds, Culture and Politics in Georgian Britain, for which he won the Wallace K. Ferguson prize. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |