Liberty, Retrenchment and Reform: Popular Liberalism in the Age of Gladstone, 1860-1880Cambridge University Press, 1992 - 476 من الصفحات In common with republicanism or socialism in continental Europe, Liberalism in nineteenth-century Britain was a mass movement. By focussing on the period between the 1860s and the 1880s, this book sets out to explain why and how that happened, and to examine the people who supported it, their beliefs, and the way in which the latter related to one another and to reality. Popular suport for the Liberal party was not irrational in either its objectives or its motivations: on the contrary, its dissemination was due to the fact that the programme of reforms proposed by the party leaders offered convincing solutions to some of the problems perceived as being the most urgent at the time. This is a revealing, innovative synthesis of the history of popular support for the Liberal party, which emphasises the extent to which Liberalism stood in the common heritage of European and American democracy. |
المحتوى
The language of popular liberalism | 31 |
The social contract | 84 |
The social question | 139 |
Anticlericalism | 192 |
The Franchise Question | 257 |
Parliament and Community | 313 |
The charismatic leader | 369 |
426 | |
463 | |
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Arch Artisans Association became Bill Board Britain British Burt candidate cause Century chapter Chartist Chronicle Church classes Coll Collection constitution Cowen democracy democratic Demonstration Durham economic Education effective Election electoral England English especially example expressed fact franchise free trade Gladstone Gladstone's Harrison History House Howell Ibid important independent interest issue Italy John Jones labour land leaders League Letter Liberal liberty London manhood mass Meeting Mill miners moral movement Newcastle newspapers Nonconformist organized Parliament Parliamentary party plebeian political poor popular present principle proposed question radicals Reform religious Report Representation representative resolution Review seemed Sept similar social Society speech struggle success suffrage taxation trade union traditional Victorian vote workers working-class wrote