BOOKS DISCUSSED IN THIS ESSAY
Cambridge University Press, 377 pp., $45.00
Indiana University Press, 345 pp., $29.95
Cambridge University Press, 356 pp., $44.50; $14.95 (paper)
Allen and Unwin, 332 pp., $37.50
Routledge and Kegan Paul, 466 pp., $45.00
Oxford University Press, 206 pp., $25.95; $9.95 (paper)
Routledge and Kegan Paul, 240 pp., $19.95
St. Martin's Press, 227 pp., $27.50
Cambridge University Press, 136 pp., $34.50
Princeton University Press, 353 pp., $35.00
Manchester University Press/Barnes and Noble, 262 pp., $25.00
Cornell University Press, 177 pp., $48.50
University of Hull Press (US distr. Humanities Press), 144 pp., $12.50 (paper)
Penguin Books, 424 pp., $5.95 (paper)
The 'long eighteenth century' from 1660 to 1800 has always been something of an enigma in English history. Before it, there came world exploration, the first settlements in North America, agricultural, commercial, industrial, and demographic growth, the Reformation, the rise of Puritanism, the formation of the Tudor state, and its temporary collapse in the violent upheavals and astonishing intellectual ferment of Europe's first Great Revolution. But what happened next? What filled the mysterious century between the end of feudalism and the establishment of capitalism, to use Marxist terminology, between the century of revolution and the Victorian age of radical improvement and reform?
Review, 7295 words
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