whatsapp logo
Image of After Chartism

After Chartism

Margot Finn

From Shelf: The history books in my office (in chronological order)

This book charts the course of working- and middle-class radical politics in England from the fall of Chartism in 1848 to the fall of Gladstone's Liberal government in 1874. The author argues that these years saw the gradual radicalisation of middle-class liberals, rather than the demoralisation of working-class culture.

This book charts the course of working- and middle-class radical politics in England from the continental revolutions of 1848 to the fall of Gladstone's Liberal government in 1874. The author traces the genealogy of English radicalism from its roots in Protestant Dissent and the seventeenth-century revolutions, but also shows how this shared radical tradition was problematized by middle-class radicals' acceptance of classical liberal economics. She traces the lineaments of this divide by contrasting middle- and working-class responses to the continental revolutions of 1848-9, to the Polish and Italian nationalism of the 1860s, and to the Paris Commune in 1871. She argues that these years witnessed not the relentless liberalization of working-class radical protest in England, but rather a significant diminution of middle-class radicals' commitment to liberal economics. This accommodation contributed to the emergence of the 'New Liberalism' of the 1880s, and helped to shape middle- and working-class responses to the early socialist movement.

Format:
Hardback
Pages:
375
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
ISBN:
9780521404969
Published Date:
27/5/1993
Dimensions:
225mm x 145mm x 32mm
Weight:
650g
Category:
British & Irish history

Currently unavailable to Buy Local

RRP: £125

Format: Hardback

ISBN: 9780521404969

No Stock


Shelves containing this book