The Transatlantic Persuasion: The Liberal-Democratic Mind in the Age of GladstoneTransaction Publishers, 1. jan. 1990 - 433 sider This pioneering work is the basic and largely unmatched study of the single transatlantic community of thought shared by nineteenth century British and Canadian Liberals and American Democrats. The result of more than tens years of comparative research, The Transatlantic Persuasion explores the roots of those ideas hat comprise a coherent Liberal-Democratic worldview: ideas about society, human relations, the economy, equality, liberty, the ethnocultural dimension of life, the proper role and nature of government, and the world community. In Britain, Canada, and the United States, Liberal-Democrats saw themselves as battlers against social evils caused by corrupt, self-seeking aristocracies. This was true whether their power was based on business wealth, land, or vested religious privilege; and in all three countries they developed practically identical public policy agendas. Widely praised for its graceful narrative style, its intriguing political and cultural analysis, and its sensitive feeling for the nuances of personality and the human condition, The Transatlantic Persuasion finds that cultural forces such as ethnicity, religion, and style of life have played an astonishingly central role in politics. Kelley sees a similar confrontation within each of the three countries between the core culture, including the Establishment and its institutions, and the outgroups, the culturally, socially, and often economically peripheral peoples. In Britain, for example, the Tories (Conservatives) were the aggressively dominant English, who look down on such minorities as the Scots and the Irish. These outgroups gathered within Gladstone's Liberal party, and from this base fought for equal status and treatment against prejudices. Similar patterns in Canada and the United States led to Kelley to conclude that these cultural facts of life were as important and powerful in public life as those that were purely economic in nature. Greeted with praise on its original publication in the general media as well as in major scholarly journals, The Transatlantic Persuasion performs history's highest office: It explains the present by placing it in the deep perspective of time, thus demonstrating how the past prefigures and shapes current events. |
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... concern was to find how , from the perspective that location gave them , they imaged the world around . them and thus how they defined their situation and that of the nation at large . Second , the worldview concept held that the ideas ...
... concern themselves with cultural issues . " Among other things these could involve the universal search for power ... concerns perhaps as those in the minds of Bailyn and Iriye , while at the Woodrow Wilson International Center for ...
... concerned , insofar as possible , with searching out con- figurations of personality . Hundreds of psychological studies in recent years have shown that what a man takes note of in his life , and elaborates in a world view , depends in ...
... concerned to get at not only the special attitudes of each man , but also the larger political world view that characterizes a whole move- ment as it passes across the generations . Just as cultural traditions are found in the novels ...
... concerned not with the for- mal categories we usually think of — the economy , the gov- ernment , and the like — but simply and plainly with the fact of arrogance . As R. B. McCallum has observed to me , the Liberal thought of the Tory ...
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The Transatlantic Persuasion: Liberal-Democratic Mind in the Age of Gladstone Robert Kelley Begrenset visning - 2020 |