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The Spectator, No. 433 (17 July 17 1712) [ Concepts ]
Politeness | Conversation | Periodicals
Anthology
Public opinion (journalism and communication) [ Social interaction / Communication ]
… dwelt on the idea of a ‘general opinion’ stemming from private reflection on public affairs as they were collectively debated. Also thanks to his famous Speech to the electors of Bristol (November 3, 1774), Burke had an outstanding … 79. Because of several attempts to control public opinion through taxes and to forbid the publication of parliamentary debates, advertising increased and writers became authoritative public leaders. Satire and novels were successful … public in general. Only publicity inside and outside the parliament could secure the continuity of critical political debate and its function, to transform domination, as Burke expressed it, from a matter of will into a matter of reason …
Books | Censorship | Newspapers | Periodicals | Public sphere
Encyclopedia
Essay periodical [ Reading & Writing / Communication / Literary & Artistic genres / Taste & Manners ]
… The Spectator banned gossip and personal satire 5 while The Free-Thinker fixed the rules of controversy and debates by forbidding personal abuses and misuse of words. 6 In addition, some of the papers were explicitly fashioned as …
Commerce | Correspondence | Femininity | Periodicals | Politics | Women
Encyclopedia