Description
About the Author
Peter Lake completed his undergraduate degree and PhD at Cambridge University and taught subsequently at Bedford College, Royal Holloway, Bedford New College, London, Cornell, and Princeton. He moved to Vanderbilt University in 2008. When in London he is an habitual attender of seminars at the Institute of Historical Research, and has been the grateful beneficiary of extended stints at both the Folger Shakespeare and Huntington Libraries.
Reviews
Lake's book adds up to a major revision and overhaul of previous accounts of Elizabethan politics. * John Guy, Journal of Modern History *
Bad Queen Bess? is an important study revealing the extremes of Elizabethan religious and political debate. With a satirical tone, Lake demonstrates successfully how Catholic propaganda helped shaped the Elizabethan political and religious landscape. ... Bad Queen Bess? is essential towards an understanding of the Elizabethan period. It will appeal to undergraduates and academics interested in early modern religion and politics. * Frank Swannack, Parergon *
a fresh and arresting perspective ... Lake takes into account print, gossip and news, and so gives subtlety and depth to his reconstruction of political debate and discussion in the otherwise highly controlled conditions of suppression and censorship under Elizabeth * Stephen Alford, London Review of Books *
a fascinating and enlightening read, from which many general lessons about human behaviour can be derived * Peter Costello, Irish Catholic *
This is a valuable account of how political debate acquired new levels of venom, with searching analysis of the printed books, manuscript treatises, plays and rumours in which these secret histories were deployed. * Lucy Wooding, Times Higher Education *
Bad Queen Bess? is an important intervention in significant debates about the past and how we should read it, as well as a work of historical astuteness. * Professor Andrew Hadfield, Reviews in History *
Peter Lake's importance in the historiography of the Elizabethan period is undisputed. He has helped bring Catholics into the mainstream of Elizabethan political history and inserted the "public sphere" into the vocabulary of early modern historians ... Bad Queen Bess? is essential reading for scholars and students. * Susan Doran, American Historical Review *
Lake makes a very focused argument, drilling a fine-gauge hole through a complicated era ... the book succeeds in doing what it sets out to do. It puts Catholic writers squarely within the "politics of pitch-making" about the English polity in Elizabeth's reign. It teaches the importance of listening to both sides of these debates, since all the protagonists were disputing about the same political entity, fighting political wars for religious ends and vice versa. It knocks the monarchical republic on the head, reducing it to "Burghley's commonwealth," temporarily useful to one faction. It does a fine job of parsing very dense texts like Bilson's True Difference. No one is better at this than Lake, and this is vintage Lake. * Norm Jones, Huntington Library Quarterly *
Book Information
ISBN 9780198753995
Author Peter Lake
Format Hardback
Page Count 510
Imprint Oxford University Press
Publisher Oxford University Press
Weight(grams) 1g
Dimensions(mm) 237mm * 162mm * 33mm