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An Arrow Against All Tyrants - Introduction by Ian Gadd (Paperback)
Loot Price: R245
Discovery Miles 2 450
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An Arrow Against All Tyrants - Introduction by Ian Gadd (Paperback)
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Loot Price R245
Discovery Miles 2 450
Expected to ship within 10 - 15 working days
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In 1646 in Newgate Gaol in London, a political activist, Richard
Overton, penned a pamphlet that contained dangerous ideas. An Arrow
Against All Tyrants asserted the inalienable rights of the
individual. 'No man has power over my rights and liberties, and I
over no man's... For by natural birth all men are equally and alike
born to like propriety, liberty and freedom.' The thoughts
contained within were radical at a time of historic upheaval in
England. This book reprints Overton's bold, declamatory pamphlet,
carefully typeset from the original at the British Library. It is
introduced by Ian Gadd, Professor of English Literature at Bath Spa
University, who sets Overton's work into its literary and
historical context. An Arrow Against All Tyrants is deal for anyone
interested in the tumult of radical ideas during the English civil
wars and the both of human rights. Introduction by Ian Gadd
(excerpt) In October 1646, somewhere on the streets of London, the
bookseller George Thomason picked up a scruffily printed work
entitled An Arrow Against all Tyrants and Tyranny by Richard
Overton (fl. 1640-63) and, as was his habit, noted the date of his
latest acquisition on its title-page. Thomason had been
systematically collecting all sorts of printed items since 1640 and
An Arrow was just the latest example of what he and his
contemporaries would have called a pamphlet - a word that, of
course, still has currency today but that lacks much of the potency
and meaning that it had for Overton's first readers. First of all,
a pamphlet was not a book. This may seem a curious thing to say,
especially as you're currently holding this book in your hands, but
a 17th Century reader would have understood the distinction. For a
start, a pamphlet was not bound. Many printed works in England in
this period were sold unbound - as folded, printed sheets o in the
expectation that a purchaser would get them bound, but some kinds
of printed items, including pamphlets, were never intended for
binding. Instead, a pamphlet like An Arrowwould have been 'stab
stitched': simply held together by coarse thread that had been
stabbed through the left-hand margin when the pamphlet was closed.
In contrast to the careful, precise, and hidden sewing of a book
binding, stab-stitching signalled a pamphlet's sense of urgency and
directness - and also its likely ephemerality. More in book
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