I know of no book that examines such a broad swath of topics and employs such a variety of sources. . . . It is seldom that an academic book, researched by a first-rate scholar, is so readable and entertaining.-Donna T. Andrew, University of Guelph -- Donna T. Andrew
From the streets, turnpikes, and taverns to the courts, pulpits, and Parliament,
Mayhem reminds us that the fractious polity of mid-century Britain took its cues from a great many players. Rogers is required reading for anyone seeking to understand the eighteenth century.-Deborah Valenze, author of
The Social Life of Money in the English Past -- Deborah Valenze
Nick Rogers' expert knowledge of electoral politics, crowd behavior and the lives of seafarers are all put to good use in this Hogarthian account of life in the British metropolis and empire in the mid eighteenth century.-Joanna Innes, Somerville College, Oxford -- Joanna Innes
Far from being an age of patrician calm, mid-eighteenth-century Britain was riven with conflict. Rogers's compelling new book examines the often violent dislocations that attended the end of the War of Austrian Succession and shows some of the surprisingly modern governmental experiments they inspired.-Margaret R. Hunt, Amherst College
-- Margaret R. Hunt
[A] lively, compelling work.-
Choice * Choice *
Rogers's fascinating examination of the gin craze is one of several interlocking case studies that together offer a vivid picture of a Hanoverian state facing myriad challenges to authority . . . Mayhem is acutely observed and richly detailed: it provides a convincing snapshot of a society reeling under a crime wave, and desperate enough to consider any means of curbing it.-Stephen Brumwell, Times Literary Supplement
-- Stephen Brumwell * Times Literary Supplement *
Winner of the 2013 John Ben Snow Prize sponsored by the North American Conference on British Studies. -- John Ben Snow * North American Conference on British Studies *
Nicholas Rogers is a deft scholar who marshals an impressive variety of sources in this book. . . . He offers a fresh take on the intersection of a variety of social and political issues at a key point in the eighteenth century.-
American Historical Review * American Historical Review *