Fr. 100.00

Entrepreneurial Politics in Mid-Victorian Britain

English · Hardback

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Zusatztext In this finely crafted work, G. R. Searle offers an insightful analysis of English politics from the perspective of the "entrepreneurial Radicals," ... Searle, a political historian, has broken new ground with the body of his work by exploring the modernization of British political life in the nineteenth and early twentieth centuries. Searle's book does a fine service by highlighting the political tensions that were always near the surface in mid-Victorian Britain ... For business historians, a book such as this one is a challenge to look beyond the firm, to explore the complex role of business people in society ... Searle's book adds an important dimension to business history bu revealing some of the ways in whch industrial captalism had begun to alter the social and political landscape of Great Britain in the mid-19th century. Klappentext Historians have long debated the issue of why Britain did not experience a 'middle-class revolution'. In the mid-Victorian years, in the aftermath of the Great Reform Act and the repeal of the Corn Laws, it seemed that a decisive shift of power from the aristocracy to the middle class might take place. In this perceptive and original book, G. R. Searle shows how many MPs from business backgrounds, the so-called 'entrepreneurial Radicals', came to Westminster determined to impose their own values and priorities on national life. Some wanted to return public manufacturing establishments to private ownership; others hoped to create an 'educational market'. Nearly all of them worried about how best to safeguard the truths of political economy should the franchise be extended to the propertyless masses. Their partial successes and many failures helped determine the political culture of modern Britain. Zusammenfassung Historians have long debated the issue of why Britain did not experience a `middle-class revolution'. In the mid-Victorian years, in the aftermath of the Great Reform Act and the repeal of the Corn Laws, it seemed that a decisive shift of power from the aristocracy to the middle class might take place.In this perceptive and original book, G. R. Searle shows how many MPs from business backgrounds, the so-called 'entrepreneurial Radicals', came to Westminster determined to impose their own values and priorities on national life. Some wanted to return public manufacturing establishments to private ownership; others hoped to create an 'educational market'. Nearly all of them worried about how best to safeguard the truths of political economy should the franchise be extended to the propertyless masses. Their partial successes and many failures helped determine the political culture of modern Britain....

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