The Reform Crisis, 18301832
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Beschrijving
Bol
In Britain, the years between 1830 and 1832 were marked by polycrisis: turbulent high and low politics, international revolution and instability, pandemic disease and acute material pressures. This book analyses how contemporaries experienced and remembered this reform crisis and the consequences of this for our understanding of British politics. The Reform Acts of 1832 have long enjoyed a central place in Britain's political history. The Reform Crisis, 1830^–^1832 examines how these years came to be experienced, understood, and remembered as ones of national crisis. Rather than focusing on the causes and outcomes of the reform legislation, Gordon Pentland analyzes the origins, experiences, and consequences of the wider crisis, which saw parliamentary reform contested amidst acute material distress, international instability, and a cholera pandemic. The book begins with an examination of the political, social, and economic roots of instability in 1830. The fraught aftermath of Catholic emancipation served to agitate and destabilize both parliamentary and popular politics, while extensive economic and social grievances generated potential audiences for a range of reform appeals. The book offers a close analysis of how these different ingredients came together to form a crisis centred on parliamentary reform. It argues that the intense period of agitation between the fall of Wellington's government and the passage of the reform legislation drew men, women, and communities across the United Kingdom and beyond into a powerful national movement. The widespread experiences of this dramatic and emotionally charged crisis were consequential. They cemented new forms of political argument and popular activism and established the memory of the reform crisis as a turning point in Britain's political development.
In Britain, the years between 1830 and 1832 were marked by polycrisis: turbulent high and low politics, international revolution and instability, pandemic disease and acute material pressures. This book analyses how contemporaries experienced and remembered this reform crisis and the consequences of this for our understanding of British politics. The Reform Acts of 1832 have long enjoyed a central place in Britain's political history. The Reform Crisis, 1830^–^1832 examines how these years came to be experienced, understood, and remembered as ones of national crisis. Rather than focusing on the causes and outcomes of the reform legislation, Gordon Pentland analyzes the origins, experiences, and consequences of the wider crisis, which saw parliamentary reform contested amidst acute material distress, international instability, and a cholera pandemic. The book begins with an examination of the political, social, and economic roots of instability in 1830. The fraught aftermath of Catholic emancipation served to agitate and destabilize both parliamentary and popular politics, while extensive economic and social grievances generated potential audiences for a range of reform appeals. The book offers a close analysis of how these different ingredients came together to form a crisis centred on parliamentary reform. It argues that the intense period of agitation between the fall of Wellington's government and the passage of the reform legislation drew men, women, and communities across the United Kingdom and beyond into a powerful national movement. The widespread experiences of this dramatic and emotionally charged crisis were consequential. They cemented new forms of political argument and popular activism and established the memory of the reform crisis as a turning point in Britain's political development.
AmazonPagina's: 256, Hardcover, Oxford University Press
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