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A Study Of The Printing And Publishing Of English Religious Books In Elizabeth Period

Posted on:2022-11-23Degree:MasterType:Thesis
Country:ChinaCandidate:P ZhouFull Text:PDF
GTID:2555307103489914Subject:World History
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Uninterrupted for forty-five years,from 1558 to 1603,Protestants in England were able to use the printing press to disseminate Protestant ideology.It was a period long enough for Protestantism to root itself deeply in the life of the nation and to accumulate its own distinctive literature.At the beginning of Elizabeth’s reign,the most urgent religious need was a clear and reasonable defense of the Anglican Church.In 1562,bishop Jewell’s Apologia Ecclesiae Anglicanae responded to this demand and set the tone for the literary debate in this period.This was the time when the Church of Elizabeth showed its strength,especially in the first few decades.In the whole period,when the queen and the country were threatened by the conspiracy of Catholicism,the critical literature against Catholicism was published constantly.But just as the press became an effective tool for defenders and apologists of the Church of England,it soon was being used as an instrument to advance the cause of further reform by more radical Protestants.Puritans,Familists and Separatists resorted to the printing press to publicize their particular brand of Protestantism.Puritans,especially,used the press to put pressure on Parliament by arranging the publication of their demands to coincide with the calling of Parliament.Stinging attacks on the established church were met with stout resistance;authors,printers and booksellers often were imprisoned and the literature suppressed.The radicals then turned to secret presses,or to presses outside of England,and continued their onslaught against the "half" reformed Church of England.While the polemicists crossed swords,the great majority of authors and translators busied themselves in producing works designed for general Protestant edification.These were the devotional,didactic and exegetical works that went into multiple editions and were in constant demand throughout the reign.Polemical and controversial writings were published from time to time,but works of edification issued from the press in a continuous stream throughout the reign.The constant repetition of Protestant doctrine and attitudes reinforced the Protestant policies consistently laid down by the government.For moral and financial support in publishing their literature,Elizabethan Protestant authors relied heavily upon a relatively small group of persons.Printers and publishers became more important to the author than the patron in getting his manuscript into print and furthering his literary pursuits.And it was a relatively small number of printers and publishers(no more than twenty-five)who bore the brunt of financing the lion’s share of Protestant literature.With such a powerful and relatively new medium as print to disseminate ideology,it is not surprising that strong censorship was exercised.From the Queen’s Injunctions of 1566,when the Vestments controversy was at its height and offensive Puritan tracts were being published,control of the press tightened as Catholics and radical Protestants became more adept at clandestine printing and at smuggling their literature into the country.Officers of the government,the church and the Stationers’ Company worked so effectively together in their "search and destroy" missions for printing presses used in illegal publishing ventures that,by the end of the period,almost all offensive religious literature had to be printed abroad.The role of the printing press in Elizabethan England is comparable to that of television in the 20 th century.As Internet revolutionizes the life style,so the printing press affected politics and religion in the last half of the 16 th century.The most effective way for Puritans,for example,to attack and embarrass the Establishment--and for the Establishment to defend itself--was to use the medium of print.So much more efficient than preaching--with much less risk of detection--the press replaced the pulpit as the main instrument of religious education and of religious reform.
Keywords/Search Tags:Elizabethan Age, Religious books, Printing and publishing, Protestant literature
PDF Full Text Request
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