This book is the first survey of the period between the Glorious
Revolution and the Reform Bill to attempt to outline some general
explanations of England as an ancien-regime state, dominated
politically, culturally and ideologically by the three pillars of an
early-modern social order: monarchy, aristocracy, church. In this
schematic study, which stems from his earlier work on party-politics in
these years, Dr Jonathan Clark combines techniques of analysis,
historiographical review and narrative to produce a new and challenging
synthesis of political ideology, religion, psephology, social structure
and cultural hegemony. In its major reinterpretations of such diverse
subjects as the wider impact of economic growth, the nature of the
social hierarchy, Jacobitism, the Church of England, radicalism, Edmund
Burke and the Reform Bill, this study has much to offer to students and
senior historians alike.