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Bourgeois Liberty and the Politics of Fear
From Absolutism to Neo-Conservatism
Marc Mulholland
416 pages
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234x156mm
978-0-19-965357-7
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Hardback
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04 October 2012
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- Offers comprehensive coverage of political history over two hundred years
- Sheds new light on topics from the Glorious Revolution of 1688 to the invasion of Iraq in 2003
- Includes a great deal of case studies, integrating them into an overall argument and narrative
- Combines an up-to-date discussion of highly topical political debates with an informed, long-range historical context
In 1842 Heinrich Heine, the German poet, wrote that the bourgeoisie, 'obsessed by a nightmare apprehension of disaster' and 'an instinctive dread of communism', were driven against their better instincts into tolerating absolutist government. Theirs was a 'politics motivated by fear'. Over the next 150 years, the middle classes were repeatedly accused of betraying liberty for fear of 'red revolution'. The failure of the revolutions of 1848, conservative nationalism from the 1860s, fascist victories in the first half of the twentieth-century, and repression of national liberation movements during the
Cold War - these fateful disasters were all explained by the bourgeoisie's fear of the masses. For their part, conservatives insisted that demagogues and fanatics exploited the desperation of the poor to subvert liberal revolutions, leading to anarchy and tyranny. Only evolutionary reform was enduring.
From the 1970s, however, liberal revolution revived on an unprecedented scale. With the collapse of communism, bourgeois liberty once again became a crusading, force, but now on a global scale. In the twenty-first century, the armed forces of the United States, Britain, and NATO became instruments of 'regime change', seeking to destroy dictatorship and build free-market democracies. President George W. Bush called the invasion of Iraq in 2003 a 'watershed event in the
global democratic revolution'. This was an extraordinary turn-around, with the middle classes now hailed as the truly universal class which, in emancipating itself, emancipates all society. The debacle in Iraq, and the Great Recession from 2008, revealed all too clearly that hubris still invited nemesis.
Bourgeois Liberty and the Politics of Fear examines this remarkable story, and the fierce debates it occasioned. It takes in a span from the seventeenth century to the twenty-first, covering a wide range of countries and thinkers. Broad in its scope, it presents a clear set of arguments that shed new light on the creation of our modern world.Readership: Academics, students, and the interested
reader
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Marc Mulholland, College and University Fellow, Faculty of History, Oxford Marc Mulholland was born in Northern Ireland in 1971. He studied history at Queen's University Belfast, and since 2000 has been teaching at St Catherine's College, University of Oxford. He is a member of the History Faculty.
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Introduction
1: Absolutism and Transformation in England
2: Revolution, Restoration, and Reform
3: Holding Back the Tide
4: The Turning-Point
5: Liberalism and the State
6: Bismarck, Liberalism, and Socialism
7: Capitalism and Socialism
8: Democracy and State-Power
9: Revolution and the 'Dictatorship of the Proletariat'
10: Communism and Fascism
11: Popular Front and War
12: Cold War and the Fear of Subversion
13: The Pivot of '68: New Left and New Right
14: The Demise of the 'Red Menace'
15: Bright Bourgeois Morning
Conclusions
Bibliographical Essay
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The specification in this catalogue, including without limitation price, format, extent, number of illustrations, and month of publication, was as accurate as possible at the time the catalogue was compiled. Occasionally, due to the nature of some contractual restrictions, we are unable to ship a specific product to a particular territory. Jacket images are provisional and liable to change before publication.
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