Editors: Michael Brown, John Kirk and Andrew Noble
Literature and Social and Political History
Introduction: Enlightenment and Revolution – A British Polemic – Michael Brown
Part I: Constituencies
1 Jacobitism versus Scotophobia: Political Radicalism and the Press in Late Eighteenth-Century Ireland – Martyn Powell
2 Lord Daer, Radicalism, Union and the Enlightenment in the 1790s – Bob Harris
3 The Political and Cultural Legacy of Robert Burns in Scotland and Ulster, c.1796–1859 – Christopher A Whatley
4 Harping on the Union: Conservative Poetics and the Percy Circle in North-East Ulster, 1795–1811 – Frank Ferguson
5 'Blessèd Jubil!': Slavery, Mission, and the Millennial Dawn in the Work of William Williams of Pantycelyn – E Wyn James
Part II: The Geography of Utterance
6 Serial Literature and Radical Poetry in Wales at the End of the Eighteenth Century – Marion Loeffler
7 ‘Theaw Kon Ekspect No Mooar Eawt ov a Pig thin a Grunt': Searching for the Radical Dialect Voice in Industrial Lancashire and the West Riding, 1798–1819 – Katrina Navickas
8 Popular Song, Readers and Language: Printed Anthologies in Irish and Scottish Gaelic, 1780–1820 – Niall Ó Ciosáin
9 Broadside Literature and Popular Political Opinion in Munster, 1800–1820 – Maura Cronin
10 Radical Poetry and the Literary Magazine: Stalking Leigh Hunt in the Republic of Letters – Dan Wall
Postscript – Jon Mee