Public Moralists: Political Thought and Intellectual Life in Britain, 1850-1930
Released: Nov 28, 1991
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Format: Hardcover, 390 pages
to view more data
Description:
This imaginative and unusual book explores the moral sensibilities and cultural assumptions that were at the heart of political debate in Victorian and early twentieth-century Britain. It focuses on the role of intellectuals as public moralists and suggests ways in which their more formal political theory rested upon habits of response and evaluation that were deeply embedded in wider social attitudes and aesthetic judgments. Collini examines the characteristic idioms and strategies of argument employed in periodical and polemical writing, and reconstructs the sense of identity and of relation to an audience exhibited by social critics from John Stuart Mill and Matthew Arnold to J.M. Keynes and F.R. Leavis.
We're an Amazon Associate. We earn from qualifying purchases at Amazon and all stores listed here.