
Protocols of Liberty – Communication Innovation and the American Revolution
Author(s): William Warner (Author)
- Publisher: University of Chicago Press
- Publication Date: 29 Oct. 2013
- Edition: Illustrated
- Language: English
- Print length: 320 pages
- ISBN-10: 022606137X
- ISBN-13: 9780226061375
Book Description
Editorial Reviews
Review
“
Protocols of Liberty is an immensely interesting and edifying account of the role of communications in British America during the political crisis of the 1770s. William B. Warner has done prodigious research and produced insightful and creative close readings of an impressive range of texts, and his emphasis on ‘protocols’ intervenes usefully in debates about American nation-building. Readers from a range of disciplines, political persuasions, and new media orientations will take notice of this book.”– “David Henkin, University of California, Berkeley”“A meticulously written book. . . . Warner has offered an important and useful study of the communication innovations that made the American Revolution possible.”– “Register of the Kentucky Historical Society”
“This beautifully written work, which explores the role sociotechnical communication networks in the founding of the United States, deserves the widest audience. William B. Warner offers a vivid decentering of events leading to the Declaration of Independence from accounts of the actions and thoughts of solitary individuals. We are today fundamentally reworking our political processes in response to new network technologies; this book provides a wonderful, urgently needed tool for rethinking our present. Liberty–then and now–has its protocols.”– “Geoffrey C. Bowker, University of California, Irvine”
“Warner’s
Protocols of Liberty offers a compelling new account of the origins of the American Revolution….This is an important book for many reasons, not the least of which is its successful bridging–perhaps transcending is a better word–of the gap between the social and ideological origins of the Revolution. Warner’s analyses of both the power of language and its limits suggest new ways of thinking about discursive genres in the eighteenth century that will resonate within other scholarly projects that seek to link the so-called “core” and “peripheral” Enlightenments. At a time when media forms have played crucial roles in a series of contemporary revolutions, Warner’s readings of the communications media of the American Revolution…powerfully demonstrate why the study of the eighteenth century continues to matter today.”–American Society for Eighteenth-Century Studies “Announcement for the Louis Gottschalk Prize”“William B. Warner’s profoundly learned and well-timed
Protocols of Liberty provides readers with a distant mirror for our own moment, returning us to the conditions of communication that determined the course of ‘Whig’ politics in the 1760s and 1770s and made the American Revolution possible. Built upon the close scrutiny of printed sources and making excellent use of generations of scholarship, Warner’s book patiently reconstructs the political networks and nodes of revolutionary America. In doing so, he provides a pointed and much-needed synthesis, bringing together what we know about the various communicative practices of the period to tell a new story about the modernity of eighteenth-century politics.”– “Eric Slauter, University of Chicago”
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