Based on archival sources, this study considers political
activities in Suffolk's two main constituencies over the course of
the 18th century. Mining the records of an unusually rich
provincial press, Sommers addresses many key questions of
Hanoverian political historiography: the press, popular political
expressions, women in politics, deference, and elite behavior. She
focuses primarily on the second half of the century, a time marked
by an increasingly sophisticated electorate that left considerable
documentary evidence, to determine how politics actually developed
in East Anglia, as recorded in public and private documents.
In addition to a description of the variety and nature of
Suffolk politics, the work elaborates upon a number of important
collateral themes. These include the appearance of intense
political awareness and enthusiastic participation in popular
activities among those not possessing the vote, coupled with a
political use of the press that grows dramatically in scope over
the course of the century. Other sections detail the sustained
development of the independence of the electorate and the
connection between religious affiliation and partisan
identification locally, as well as that between local and national
parties.
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