Levin traces the century and a half between the American and
French revolutions and the end of the First World War, a key period
for public debate over democratization. Examining the writings and
ideology of a variety of anti-democratic thinkers, he illustrates
how arguments for franchise extention had to contend with a deeply
entrenched antipathy to democratic ideas. Only if we resurrect
expressions of this opposition, he argues, and recall the dominant
values that democracy challenged, are we able to understand the
historical and ideological context from which modern western values
and institutions emerged.
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