Contents: Introduction: The British response to the threat of invasion, 1797-1815, Mark Philp; A tale of two conflicts: critiques of the British war effort, 1793-1815, Philip Harling; The sea fencibles, loyalism, and the reach of the state, Nicholas Rogers; The defence of Manchester and Liverpool in 1803: conflicts of loyalism, patriotism and the middle classes, Katrina Navickas; 'An insurrection of loyalty': the London volunteer regiments' response to the invasion threat, Jon Newman; In defence of Great Britain: Henry Addington, the Duke of York and military preparations against invasion by Napoleonic France, 1803-04, Charles John Fedorak; 'This soldierlike danger': the trial of William Blake for sedition, Jon Mee and Mark Crosby; John Bull in a dream: fear and fantasy in the visual satires of 1803, Alexandra Franklin; Britain and the black legend: the genesis of the anti-Napoleonic myth, Simon Burrows; 'The cheap defence of nations': monuments and propaganda, Holger Hoock; Music and politics, 1793-1815: section 1: introduction, Mark Philp; Section 2: the Volunteer Band, Newcastle Upon Tyne, Roz Southey; Section 3: 'you heroes of the day': ephemeral verse responses to the Peace of Amiens and the Napoleonic Wars, 1802-04, Caroline Jackson-Houlston; Section 4: 'thus we kept away Bonaparte': music in Oxford at the time of the Napoleonic Wars, Susan Wollenberg; Anti-English discourse among the authorities: myths and realities in the northern départements, Annie Crépin and Vincent Cuvilliers; 'An inundation from our shores': travelling across the Channel around the Peace of Amiens, Renaud Morieux; Index.
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