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Resistance, Politics, and the American Struggle for Independence, 1765–1775
Edited by Walter H. Conser, Jr., Ronald M. McCarthy, David Toscano, Gene Sharp



Title: Resistance, Politics, and the American Struggle for Independence, 1765–1775

Author: Edited by Walter H. Conser, Jr., Ronald M. McCarthy, David Toscano, and Gene Sharp

ISBN: 0-931477-75-1

Publisher & year: Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1986

Languages available: English

Price: Out of Print

TO ORDER: Please contact us for more information

Contents:

Preface

PART ONE: A DECADE OF STRUGGLE, 1765–1775
1. The American Independence Movement, 1765–1775: A Decade of Nonviolent Struggles
2. The Stamp Act Resistance
3. The First Rockingham Ministry and the Repeal of the Stamp Act: The Role of the Commerical Lobby and Economic Pressures
Intro Chpt. 4: Circular Letters, Customs Officers, and the Issue of Violence: The Background to the Townshend Acts Resistance
4. The Nonconsumption and Nonimportation Movement Against the Townshend Acts, 1767–1770
5. British Response to American Reactions to the Townshend Acts, 1767–1770
Intro Chpt. 6: Sullen Silence or Prelude to Resistance: Background to the Continental Association, 1771 to May 1774
6. The Continental Association: Economic Resistance and Government by Committee
7. The British Business Community and the Later Nonimportation Movements, 1768–1776
8. The British Ministers, Massachusetts, and the Continental Congress, 1774–1775

PART TWO: THE IMPACT OF THE STRUGGLE
9. The Impact of the Commercial Resistance
10. Religion and the Development of Political Resistance in the Colonies
11. English Radicals and American Resistance to British Authority
12. A Shift in Strategy: The Organization of Military Struggle
13. British Attitudes to the American Revolution
14. Resistance Politics and the Growth of Parallel Government in America, 1765–1775

Appendixes
Contributors
Index