| Pen for a Party: Dryden''s Tory Propaganda in Its Contexts: Dryden''s Tory Propaganda in Its Contexts Subjects: Dryden John 1631–1700 -- Pohtical and social views; Politics and literature -- England -- History -- 17th century; Great Britain -- Politics and government -- 1660–1688; Conservatism -- England -- History -- 17th century; Conservative Party (Great Brita; Exploring the political climate during the final years of the reign of Charles II, when John Dryden wrote his great public poems and several of his dramatic works, Phillip Harth sheds new light on this writer's literary activity on behalf of the monarch. The poems Absalom and Achitophel and The Medall , and the dramatic works The Duke of Guise and Albion and Albanius , have commonly been considered in relation to such public events as the Popish Plot, the Exclusion Crisis, and the Tory Reaction, but that approach does not explain the noticeable differences among these works or the specific purposes for which they were written. Harth argues that the immediate contexts of these works were not the historical events themselves but a constantly developing series of propaganda offensives, both Tory and Whig, designed to influence public opinion toward fluctuating conditions. |