Global Dilemmas: Imperial Bolton-le-Moors from the Hungry Forties to the Death of Leverhulme

Global Dilemmas: Imperial Bolton-le-Moors from the Hungry Forties to the Death of Leverhulme

by Malcolm Hardman
Global Dilemmas: Imperial Bolton-le-Moors from the Hungry Forties to the Death of Leverhulme

Global Dilemmas: Imperial Bolton-le-Moors from the Hungry Forties to the Death of Leverhulme

by Malcolm Hardman

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Overview

No more than there can be time without space can there be history without locality. This book takes a road less traveled into a locality that provides fresh insights into our global dilemmas.

Bolton-le-Moors was a global center of cotton, coal, and engineering, whose factory engines were the beating heart of the Victorian world. Commanding the widest range of trades of any town in the Empire, it specialized in papermaking, from pawn tickets to banknotes, via newspapers and syndicated fiction. Responsive to locality, yet world-aware, its many independent writers shared a creative forum with authors like Wordsworth, Tennyson, Ruskin, Gaskell, Charlotte Brontë, Tolstoy, Whitman, Thomas Hardy, T. S. Eliot, Virginia Woolf. Other “locals” include mathematician Thomas Kirkman, “father of design theory,” Thomas Moran, painter of the American “New West,” Charles Holden, the Empire’s leading Modern architect. Bolton’s printed culture was founded on traditions that made it a bulwark of parliamentary puritanism in the days of Reformation and Civil War. These traditions increasingly confronted global dilemmas that the town’s own inventiveness and entrepreneurship had helped create: yet its high moorlands also provided a breathing space to generate imaginative spiritual, political, and practical remedies. Global Dilemmas completes the account of Bolton writing initiated in A Kingdom in Two Parishes and continued in Classic Soil: an arc of discourse from Thomas Lever (1521-77), whose social experiments provided the model for the Protestant colonization of the New World, to his kinsman W. H. Lever (Lord Leverhulme), sincere Christian, world capitalist, progressive social thinker, and (pursuing the logic of profit) exploiter of Conrad’s African “heart of darkness.”

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781611479034
Publisher: University Press Copublishing Division
Publication date: 10/06/2017
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 434
File size: 44 MB
Note: This product may take a few minutes to download.

About the Author

Malcolm Hardman was a director of graduate studies, University of Warwick, and chairman of the Ruskin Society.

Table of Contents

SECTION ONE: Victorian
Part One: Famine
  1. Recognition
  2. New Political Conditions
  3. “The Irish Emergency”
  4. During the Cotton Famine

Part Two: Bread upon the Waters
  1. A Miracle of Design?
  2. Fight and Weave

SECTION TWO: Modern
Part Three: Socialism
  1. Three Bolton Socialists: Wallace, Johnston, Clarke
  2. The Power of Association
  3. Privileged Impressions
  4. Fresh Impressions

Part Four: Advertising
  1. The Pity of War
  2. Beyond Self-Help
  3. Three Bolton Capitalists: Tillotson, Thomasson, Lever

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