In Licensing Loyalty, historian Jane McLeod explores the
evolution of the idea that the royal government of
eighteenth-century France had much to fear from the rise of print
culture. She argues that early modern French printers helped foster
this view as they struggled to negotiate a place in the expanding
bureaucratic apparatus of the French state. Printers in the
provinces and in Paris relentlessly lobbied the government, hoping
to convince authorities that printing done by their commercial
rivals posed a serious threat to both monarchy and morality. By
examining the French state's policy of licensing printers and the
mutually influential relationships between officials and printers,
McLeod sheds light on our understanding of the limits of French
absolutism and the uses of print culture in the political life of
provincial France.
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