Liberty and Liberticide: The Role of America in Nineteenth-Century British Radicalism
America was important to many British radicals. It was a model, an exemplar, a source of inspiration, and American events were believed to have a bearing on reform debates in Britain. Many scholars focus on the positive impressions of the United States that prominent British radicals entertained, developed, and propagated, but it is necessary also to explore the reasons why some radicals condemned rather than praised America, and to explain how America was conceptualized and used by them, and to what purpose.

Liberty and Liberticide focuses on the influence America exerted over the ideas and activities of nineteenth-century British radicals. While some looked on America as the model of liberty, others associated it with the destruction of liberty. Turner shows how radicals’ views about the United States and the course of Anglo-American relations shaped their domestic reform agenda and their assumptions about British political values and Britain’s place in the world.
1116257502
Liberty and Liberticide: The Role of America in Nineteenth-Century British Radicalism
America was important to many British radicals. It was a model, an exemplar, a source of inspiration, and American events were believed to have a bearing on reform debates in Britain. Many scholars focus on the positive impressions of the United States that prominent British radicals entertained, developed, and propagated, but it is necessary also to explore the reasons why some radicals condemned rather than praised America, and to explain how America was conceptualized and used by them, and to what purpose.

Liberty and Liberticide focuses on the influence America exerted over the ideas and activities of nineteenth-century British radicals. While some looked on America as the model of liberty, others associated it with the destruction of liberty. Turner shows how radicals’ views about the United States and the course of Anglo-American relations shaped their domestic reform agenda and their assumptions about British political values and Britain’s place in the world.
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Liberty and Liberticide: The Role of America in Nineteenth-Century British Radicalism

Liberty and Liberticide: The Role of America in Nineteenth-Century British Radicalism

by Michael J. Turner
Liberty and Liberticide: The Role of America in Nineteenth-Century British Radicalism

Liberty and Liberticide: The Role of America in Nineteenth-Century British Radicalism

by Michael J. Turner

Hardcover

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Overview

America was important to many British radicals. It was a model, an exemplar, a source of inspiration, and American events were believed to have a bearing on reform debates in Britain. Many scholars focus on the positive impressions of the United States that prominent British radicals entertained, developed, and propagated, but it is necessary also to explore the reasons why some radicals condemned rather than praised America, and to explain how America was conceptualized and used by them, and to what purpose.

Liberty and Liberticide focuses on the influence America exerted over the ideas and activities of nineteenth-century British radicals. While some looked on America as the model of liberty, others associated it with the destruction of liberty. Turner shows how radicals’ views about the United States and the course of Anglo-American relations shaped their domestic reform agenda and their assumptions about British political values and Britain’s place in the world.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780739178171
Publisher: Lexington Books
Publication date: 11/15/2013
Pages: 288
Product dimensions: 6.20(w) x 9.10(h) x 1.10(d)

About the Author

Michael J. Turner is Roy Carroll Distinguished Professor of British History at Appalachian State University, North Carolina.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1The Politics and Rhetoric of Admiration
Chapter 2Eulogies with Reservations
Chapter 3The Growth of Anti–Americanism: Tariffs, Slavery, and U.S. Foreign Policy
Chapter 4American Crisis, part one
Chapter 5American Crisis, part two
Chapter 6After the Civil War
Chapter 7Late Nineteenth–Century Political and Economic Contexts
Conclusion
Index
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