Synopses & Reviews
This collection of interdisciplinary essays examines three centuries of radical political activity and thought in England in an attempt to identify and isolate "radical traditions." Written by a distinguished group of international experts, these essays explore and reflect upon the concept of radicalism in political thought and action within a theoretical context.
Synopsis
Study of three centuries of radical ideas and activity in English political and social history.
Synopsis
An exploration of the place of radical ideas and activity in English political and social history. Leading experts examine whether the things that historians label 'radical' are part of a single complex radical tradition or are merely separate phenomena linked only by the minds and language of historians.
About the Author
Glenn Burgess is Professor of History at the University of Hull. His publications include The Politics of the Ancient Constitution: An Introduction to English Political Thought 1603-1642 (1992), and Absolute Monarchy and the Stuart Constitution (1996).Matthew Festenstein is Reader in Politics at the University of Sheffield. His recent publications include, with Michael Kenny, Political Ideologies (2005), and Negotiating Diversity (2005).
Table of Contents
Introduction Glenn Burgess and Matthew Festenstein; 1. A politics of emergency in the reign of Elizabeth I Stephen Alford; 2. Richard Overton as a milestone of English radical history: the new intertext of the civic ethos in mid-seventeenth-century England Luc Borot; 3. Radicalism and the English Revolution Glenn Burgess; 4. 'That Kind of People': Late Stuart Radicals and their manifestoes: a functional approach Richard Greaves; 5. The divine creature and the female citizen: manners, religion, and the two rights strategies in Mary Wollstonecraft's Vindications Gregory Claeys; 6. On not inventing the English Revolution: the radical failure of the 1790s as linguistic non-performance? Ian Hampsher-Monk; 7. Disconcerting ideas: explaining popular radicalism and popular loyalism in the 1790s Mark Philp; 8. The 1790s and the emergence of British radicalism Gregory Claeys; 8. Henry Hunt's peep into a prison: the radical discontinuities of imprisonment for debt Margot Finn; 9. Jeremy Bentham's radicalism Fred Rosen; 10. Religion and the emergence of radicalism in nineteenth-century England J. C. D. Clark; 11. Joseph Hume and the Reformation of India 1819-33 Miles Taylor; Afterwords: Radicalism revisited Conal Condren; Radicalism reassessed J. C. Davis.