About: Guildhall is a research topic. Over the lifetime, 150 publications have been published within this topic receiving 898 citations. The topic is also known as: guild hall & guildhall.
TL;DR: In this article, a criminological perspective of crime and the media is presented, from media studies to post-modernism, with a focus on the role of the media in crime.
Abstract: Crime and the media - a criminological perspective, David Kidd-Hewitt (London Guildhall University) crime and the media - from media Studies to postmodernism, Richard Osborne (London Guildhall University) entertaining the crisis - television and moral enterprise, Richard Sparks (Keele University) Black cops and Black villains in film and TV crime fiction, Jim Pines (University of Luton) telling tales - media power, ideology and the reporting of child sexual Abuse in Britain, Paula Skidmore (Nottingham Trent University) media reporting of rape - the 1993 British "date rape" controversy, Sue Lees (University of North London) through the looking glass - public images of white collar crime, A.E. Stephenson-Burton a fair cop? - viewing the effects of the canteen culture in prime suspect and between the lines, Mary Eaton (St Mary's University College, Strawberry Hill, Middlesex) prime time punishment - the British prison and television, Paul Mason small crime to big time - an Australian celebrity self-abduction, Noel Sanders (UTS, Sydney) drugs and the media in the era of postmodernity - an archaeological analysis, Richard Giulianotti (University of Aberdeen) from desire to deconstruction - horror films and audience reactions, Rikke Schubart (University of Copenhagen) TV terrorism - myth and representation, Richard Osborne ungentlemanly conduct - football hooligans, the media and the construction of notoriety, Richard Giulianotti and Gary Armstrong (University of Westminster).
TL;DR: In this paper, a study of Chaucer's scribe has been presented, in which many more anonymous scribes, anonymous ones, worked in conditions we are only beginning to understand.
Abstract: The 2004 announcement that Chaucer's scribe had been discovered resulted in a paradigm shift in medieval studies. Adam Pynkhurst dominated the classroom, became a fictional character, and led to suggestions that this identification should prompt the abandonment of our understanding of the development of London English and acceptance that the clerks of the Guildhall were promoting vernacular literature as part of a concerted political program. In this meticulously researched study, Lawrence Warner challenges the narratives and conclusions of recent scholarship. In place of the accepted story, Warner provides a fresh, more nuanced one in which many more scribes, anonymous ones, worked in conditions we are only beginning to understand. Bringing to light new information, not least, hundreds of documents in the hand of one of the most important fifteenth-century scribes of Chaucer and Langland, this book represents an important intervention in the field of Middle English studies.
TL;DR: The Exclusion Controversy of 1679-81 echoes many of the constitutional issues debated before and during the Civil War, just as it anticipates the arguments used to support the 1688 Revolution as mentioned in this paper.
Abstract: The Exclusion Controversy of 1679–81 echoes many of the constitutional issues debated before and during the Civil War, just as it anticipates many of the arguments used to support the 1688 Revolution. If the attempt to exclude James, Duke of York, from the succession to the throne was abortive, it still provides an important key to contemporary opinion about the vital political problems of the century; and at this time when the structure, indeed the very existence of the early Whig and Tory parties is being questioned, the Exclusion Controversy can be shown in one respect at least to have had a markedly unifying effect on the former party, as demonstrated in its literature. The attempt at Exclusion was the supreme effort of Shaftesbury to rally the early Whig party, and it was accompanied by an intensive propaganda campaign, issuing forth a steady stream of pamphlets, most of which are still extant. Some of the best of these have been printed in Somer's Tracts, The Harleian Miscellany and State Tracts: A Collection of Treatises relating to the Government, Privately Printed in the Reign of Charles II, 1693; while others are now very rare, and single copies may be found only in the British Museum or Bodleian Library, or in such repositories as the City Guildhall Library, London. Together with the Tory replies, they form a list of nearly two hundred titles, not as vast a collection as the Civil War produced, but one to compare favourably with the volume of pamphlets occasioned by the Restoration and the Revolution.