ABSTRACT

This edited collection of essays focuses on the topic of protest during the Enlightenment of the long eighteenth century (roughly 1670-1833).

Resistance in the eighteenth century was extensive, and the act of protest to foment meaningful societal change took on many forms from the circulation of ballads, swearing of oaths, to riots and work stoppages, or the composition of essays, novels, posters, caricatures, political cartoons, as well as theater and opera. The contributors to this volume examine the causes of protest as well as the broad ways in which common artifacts such as poles, trees, drums, conchs, and songs acted as flashpoints for conflict and vehicles of protest. Rather than approaching the topic with strict geographical, temporal, and structural limitations, this book focuses on the time period from an international perspective and an interdisciplinary scope.

 Because of its wide scope, this book is an important contribution to the subject that will be of interest to both faculty and students of the history of protest, resistance and the changes that these forces bring as it also reminds us that the protests of today are rooted in historical resistances of the past.

chapter |10 pages

Introduction

They Were Warned, and Yet They Persisted

part I|72 pages

Obnoxious, Disorderly, and Defiant

chapter 1|14 pages

“So Many People of All Sorts Rose in Opposition”

Examining the Diversity of Participants in Colonial Crowd Action

chapter 2|24 pages

“The Sovereign Right of Thinking”

Opposition to the Alien and Sedition Acts in Song

chapter 4|20 pages

The American Founders against Protest

Non-Violent Farmers, Political Theology, and the Fabrication of Shays’s Rebellion

part III|72 pages

Taxes, Tariffs, and Trade Wars

chapter 9|15 pages

“The Basis of Alienation will never be healed”

The Historicity of Protest in Ezra Stiles’ Stamp Act Notebook

chapter 10|19 pages

“The War of Nullification”

Imagining Disunion in South Carolina, 1828–1833

chapter 11|18 pages

Hunger, Protest, and the Madrid Famine of 1811

Francisco de Goya’s Disasters of War and José Aparicio’s El año del hambre de Madrid

part IV|55 pages

Images, Oaths, and Hell

chapter 12|18 pages

Hell Is Over

Poetry and Protest in the Folksong Jarabe Gatuno in Eighteenth-Century Mexico

chapter 14|18 pages

Discontented, Disquieting, Disturbing

The Ephemeral as Symbols of Popular Resistance in Spain