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Index
Cover
Title
Copyright
Contents
List of Illustrations
Acknowledgments
A Note on Conventions and Methods
1. The Newspaper-Based Political System of the Nineteenth-Century United States
2. The Printing Trade in Early American Politics
3. The Two National Gazettes and the Beginnings of Newspaper Politics
4. Benjamin Franklin Bache and the Price of Partisanship
5. The Background and Failure of the Sedition Act
6. Charles Holt’s Generation: From Commercial Printers to Political Professionals
7. The Expansion of the Republican Newspaper Network,1789–1800
8. A Presence in the Public Sphere: William Duane and the Triumph of Newspaper Politics
9. The New Conventional Wisdom: Consolidating and Expanding a Newspaper-Based Political System
10. The Federalists Strike Back
11. Improving on the Sedition Act: Press Freedom and Political Culture After 1800
12. The “Tyranny of Printers” in Jeffersonian Philadelphia
13. Ordinary Editors and Everyday Politics: How the System Worked
14. Newspaper Editors and the Reconstruction of Party Politics
Appendix 1: Charts on the Growth of the American Press
Appendix 2: The Sedition Act and the Expansion of the Republican Press
Notes
Selected Bibliography
Index
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