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English Radicalism, 1550-1850 : Tradition or Fabrication?.

Study of three centuries of radical ideas and activity in English political and social history.

Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Burgess, Glenn
Otros Autores: Festenstein, Matthew
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Cambridge : Cambridge University Press, 2007.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Half-title; Title; Copyright; Contents; Contributors; Introduction; i; ii; The Marxist recovery of English radicalism; Three approaches to radicalism: critique of the Marxist recovery; iii; Four particular problems; Historical transmission; Radical ideas and social history; Religion; Language and anachronism; iv; Chapter 1 A Politics of Emergency in the Reign of Elizabeth I; i; ii; iii; iv; v; Notes; Chapter 2 Richard Overton and Radicalism: the New Intertext of the Civic Ethos in Mid Seventeenth-Century England; Notes; Chapter 3 Radicalism and the English Revolution.
  • Historiography and the english neo-reformationProblems of definition and identification: locating the levellers; Mapping radicalism?; Notes; Chapter 4 'That Kind of People': Late Stuart Radicals and their Manifestoes, a Functional Approach; Notes; Chapter 5 The Divine Creature and the Female Citizen: Manners, Religion, and the Two Rights Strategies in Mary Wollstonecraft's Vindications; Conclusion; Notes; Chapter 6 On Not Inventing the English Revolution: the Radical Failure of the 1790s as Linguistic Non-Performance; Political implications of continuities.
  • A linguistic revolution as a precursor of revolutionary language?Notes; Chapter 7 Disconcerting Ideas: Explaining Popular Radicalism and Popular Loyalism in the 1790s; i; ii; ii; iv; v; vi; vii; Acknowledgment; Notes; Chapter 8 Henry Hunt's Peep into a Prison: the Radical Discontinuities of Imprisonment for Debt; Notes; Chapter 9 Jeremy Bentham's Radicalism; i; ii; iii; iv; iv; Notes; Chapter 10 Religion and the Origins of Radicalism in Nineteenth-Century Britain; Origins: from 'radical reformers' to 'radicals'; Enemies: the anti-jacobin contribution.
  • The life-experience of the radical: 'nathan butt' and samuel bamfordFrom 'radical reform' to 'radicalism': jeremy bentham and the rev. james mill; Radicalism versus whiggism and socialism; Notes; Chapter 11 Joseph Hume and the Reformation of India, 1819-33; i; ii; iii; iv; Acknowledgment; Notes; Afterwords; Afterword: Radicalism Revisited; Notes; Afterword: Reassessing Radicalism in a Traditional Society: Two Questions; Introduction; I. Transformation of rule; II. The question of language; III. Transformation of rule substantially applied; III. i The state/government.
  • III. ii Government and societyIV. Reassessing some mid-seventeenth-century radicals: the levellers, winstanley and harrington; IV. i The Levellers; IV. ii Winstanley; IV. iii Harrington; IV. iv Three Radicalisms Reconsidered; V. Conclusion; Notes; Index.