Plots of Opportunity: Representing Conspiracy in Victorian England

Forside
Ohio State University Press, 2004 - 188 sider

The working classes, colonial subjects, European nationalists, and Roman Catholics--these groups generated intense anxiety for Victorian England's elite public, which often responded by accusing them of being dangerous conspirators. Bringing together a wide range of literary and historical evidence, Albert D. Pionke argues that the pejorative meanings attached to such opportunistic accusations of conspiracy were undermined by the many valorized versions of secrecy in Victorian society.

After surveying England's evolving theories of representative politics and individual and collective secretive practices, Pionke traces the intersection of democracy and secrecy through a series of case histories. Using works by Thomas Carlyle, Wilkie Collins, Charles Dickens, Benjamin Disraeli, John Henry Newman, and others, along with periodicals, histories, and parliamentary documents of the period, he shows the rhetorical prominence of groups such as the Freemasons, the Thugs, the Carbonari, the Fenians, and the Jesuits in Victorian democratic discourse.

By highlighting the centrality of representations of conspiracy in every case, Plots of Opportunity shows for the first time the markedly similar strategies of repression, resistance, and concealment used by competing agents in the democracy debate.

 

Innhold

The Figure of Freemasonry Carlyles
1
Trade Unions as Secret Societies
22
Catholic Emancipation Tractarian Reserve
50
Papal Aggression
69
The Making of the Indian Mutiny
79
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Om forfatteren (2004)

Albert D. Pionke is assistant professor of English at the University of Alabama.

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