Mục lục
Introduction – Laurent Curelly and Nigel Smith
Part I: Radical language and themes
1. The community of good motif: an unacceptable radical theme at the time of the English revolution – Jean-Pierre Cavaillé
2. Thomas Paine’s democratic linguistic radicalism: a political philosophy of language? – Carine Lounissi
3. English radicalism in the 1650s: the Quaker search for the true knowledge – Catherine Gill
Part II: Radical exchanges and networks
4. Secular millenarianism as a radical utopian project in Shaftesbury – Patrick Müller
5. The diffusion and impact of Baron d’Holbach’s texts in Great Britain, 1765-1800 – Nicholas Treuherz
Part III: Radical media and practices
6. The parliamentary context of political radicalism in the English revolution – Jason Peacey
7. Toasting and the diffusion of radical ideas, 1780-1832 – Rémy Duthille
Part IV: Radical fiction and representation
8. Contesting the press-oppressors of the age: the captivity narrative of William Okeley (1675) – Catherine Vigier
9. Ways of thinking, ways of writing: novelistic expression of radicalism in the works of Godwin, Holcroft and Bage – Marion Leclair
10. ‘The insane enthusiasm of the time’: remembering the regicides in eighteenth- and nineteenth-century Britain and North America – Edward Vallance
Index