Ventunesimo Secolo
Letture consigliate

History, Historians, and Conservatism in Britain and America. From the Great War to Thatcher and Reagan

di Reba Soffer,untitled.JPG
Oxford University Press, 2008

Presentazione

scarica l'introduzione cliccando qui

History, Historians, and Conservatism in Britain and America examines the subjects, motives, and personal and intellectual origins of conservative historians who were also successful public intellectuals. In their search for a persuasive and wide appeal, conservatives depended until at least the 1960s upon history and historians to provide conservative concepts with authority and authenticity.

Beginning with the Great War in Britain and the Second World War in America, conservative historians participated actively and influentially in debates about the heart, soul, and especially the mind of conservatism. Particular emphasis is placed on four historians in Britain-F. J. C. Hearnshaw, Keith Feiling, Arthur Bryant, and Herbert Butterfield-and three in America-Daniel Boorstin, Peter Viereck, and Russell Kirk-who developed conservative responses to unprecedented and threatening events both at home and abroad. These historians shared basic assumptions about human nature and society, but their subjects, interpretations, conclusions, and prescriptions were independent and idiosyncratic. Uniquely close to powerful political figures, each historian also spoke directly to a large public, which bought their books, read their contributions to newspapers and journals, listened to them on the radio, and watched them on television.

Provocative and compelling, Reba Soffer's pioneering study provides a comprehensive explanation of the content, context, and consequences of conservative ideas that became dominant in Britain and remained marginal in America until the Reagan ascendancy. 

Readership: Students and scholars of modern British and American history; those interested in the development of conservatism

Contents

Introduction

Part I: Intellectual History, Political thought, and Conservatism
 
Part II: The Inter-War Decades in Britain
 
1. Conservatism as a Crusade: F.J.C. Hearnshaw
2. The Attraction of Tory Democracy: Keith Feiling
3. The Phenomenon of Arthur Bryant: Patriotism, Conservatism, and the Greater Public
4. Arthur Bryant, Appeasement and Anti-Semitism

Part III: Post-war Britain
 
5. Christianity and Conservative Historiography : Hebert Butterfield, Cambridge, and the Greater World

Part IV: Post-war America

6. Conservative History and Social Criticism, 1941 through the 1960s
7. The Americanization of the British Conservative Mind
8. Conservatism and Exceptionalism

Epilogue: The Future of the Conservative Past

Bibliography 

Reba Soffer, Professor of History, Emeritus, California State University