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This study of English political thought in the eighteenth and
nineteenth centuries is organized around the concept of a Whig
tradition. Professor Burrow argues that the study of
nineteenth-century liberal thought has taken insufficient account
of its eighteenth-century antecedents. The work of modern scholars
on eighteenth-century themes, especially the civic humanist
tradition and the Scottish Enlightenment, is drawn on as a preamble
to considering the central ideas of Liberalism. The book traces how
the concept changed between the early eighteenth and the late
nineteenth century, and examines the main points of continuity,
analogy, and difference in the progress of society, public opinion,
individuality, and the idea of balance. A concluding chapter looks
at the early twentieth century.
The idea of a 'Whig interpretation' of English history incorporates
the two fundamental notions of progress and continuity. The former
made it possible to read English history as a 'success story', the
latter endorsed a pragmatic, gradualist political style as the
foundation of English freedom. Dr Burrow's book explore these
ideas, and the tensions between them in studies of four major
Victorian historians: Macaulay, Stubbs, Freeman and (as something
of an anti type) Froude. It analyses their works in terms of their
rhetorical suggestiveness as well as their explicit arguments, and
attempts to place them in their cultural and historiographical
context. In doing so, the book also seeks to establish the
significance for the Victorians of three great crises of English
history - the Norman conquest, the reformation and the revolution
of the seventeenth century - and the nature and limits of the
self-confidence they were able to derive from the national past.
The book will interest students and teachers working on
nineteenth-century English history, literature or social and
political thought, the history of ideas, and legal and
constitutional history. It will also be of value to the general
reader interested in Victorian literature and cultural history.
In this 1966 text Dr Burrow investigates the reasons why Victorian
pioneers of social science were habitually approaching the study of
other societies with largely positivistic and evolutionary
methodologies. As a result of this, anthropology appeared to be
seeking affirmation of assumed laws and stages of progress, rather
than looking to appreciate and understand other societies in terms
of their own uniqueness and functionality. Here, the author not
only studies Victorian thought on evolution in general, but also
seeks to contextualise those ideas which are often classified as
exclusively Darwinist within the studies and writings of other
leading figures in Victorian science and social science, whose
works often predate The Origin of the Species. His book also makes
an incredibly important contribution to the ways in which ideas on
evolution and society operated within the framework of general
Victorian thought and assumption.
This elegantly written book explores the history of ideas in Europe
from the revolutions of 1848 to the beginning of the First World
War. Broader than a straight survey, deeper and richer than a
textbook, this work seeks to place the reader in the position of an
informed eavesdropper on the intellectual conversations of the
past. J. W. Burrow first outlines the intellectual context of the
mid-nineteenth century, using ideas taken from physics, social
evolution, and social Darwinism, and anxieties about modernity and
personal identity, to explore the impact of science and social
thought on European intellectual life. The discussion encompasses
powerful and fashionable concepts in evolution, art, myth, the
occult, and the unconscious mind; the rise of the great cities of
Berlin, Paris, and London; and the work of literary writers,
philosophers, and composers. Most of the great intellectual figures
of the age-and many of the lesser known-populate the book, among
them Mill, Bakunin, Nietzsche, Bergson, Renan, Pater, Proust,
Clough, Flaubert, Wagner, and Wilde. The author wears his erudition
lightly, and this distinguished book will be both entertaining and
accessible to scholars, students, and general readers alike.
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