After the Restoration, parliamentarians continued to identify with the
decisions to oppose and resist crown and established church. This was
despite the fact that expressing such views between 1660 and 1688 was to
open oneself to charges of sedition or treason. This book uses
approaches from the field of memory studies to examine 'seditious
memories' in seventeenth-century Britain, asking why people were
prepared to take the risk of voicing them in public. It argues that such
activities were more than a manifestation of discontent or radicalism -
they also provided a way of countering experiences of defeat. Besides
speech and writing, parliamentarian and republican views are shown to
have manifested as misbehaviour during official commemorations of the
civil wars and republic. The book also considers how such views were
passed on from the generation of men and women who experienced civil war
and revolution to their children and grandchildren.