Politics and the People: A Study in English Political Culture, 1815-1867

Forside
Cambridge University Press, 2. sep. 1993 - 429 sider
This ambitious and provocative study provides a unique narrative of nineteenth-century English political history. Based on extensive research the book draws on critical theory to read and interpret a vast range of oral, visual and printed sources, in an attempt to expand our conception of the politics of the period. Read in the context of such sources, nineteenth-century English politics becomes resolved into a story about the struggle to define the nation's constitution, past, present and future. It suggests the existence of a popular strain of English libertarian politics, albeit one whose radical and democratic potential was gradually closed down. In short, despite the invention of a liberal constitution in this period, politics became less (not more) democratic, a lesson which the author sees as pertinent for many struggling to live in, or establish, liberal democratic constitutions in our own times.

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Innhold

A new political history I
1
the structure of official politics 58
15
the culture of official politics
48
power print and
105
A language of party?
163
Organisation as symbol
183
The politics of culture
207
leaders and their popular
251
the discourse of popular
295
New narratives in the history of English politics?
331
Appendices
340
Bibliography
355
Index
421
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