In:News with an Attitude: Ideological perspectives in the historical press
Edited by Claudia Claridge
[Discourse Approaches to Politics, Society and Culture 105] 2025
► pp. 108–132
Chapter 6Revolutionary news
Reporting civil unrest in 1640s London and Naples
Published online: 16 January 2025
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.105.06doo
https://doi.org/10.1075/dapsac.105.06doo
Abstract
News travelled quickly during the troubled 1640s in Europe and had almost palpable effects. But how
did news travel, and who got it first? Weekly handwritten newsletters transmitted from sites of crisis to the Tuscan
Grand Ducal court and elsewhere, are a still under-used source. This chapter analyses the similarities and differences
between weekly handwritten news reporting about two places, London and
Naples, both of which experienced regime-changing commotions in the 1640s, among others similarly afflicted at the
time. More concretely, we will be comparing and contrasting these two cases of popular unrest resulting in the
creation of new forms of government, and the linguistic ramifications of this in the realms of diction, word usage,
sentiment and sense of belonging.
Keywords: revolution, history, crisis, handwritten newsletters, media history, Naples, England, Florence
Article outline
- 1.Introduction
- 2.Handwritten newsletters: Genre and dynamics
- 3.Revolutionary news
- 4.Neapolitan Revolution news
- 5.Conclusions
- Acknowledgment
Notes References
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