While the word “liberalism” only appeared in Britain from the 1820s, this article argues that its prehistory must pay attention to the language of “liberality.” It suggests that until the 1760s, to be “liberal,” and to demonstrate “liberality,” were primarily associated with the exercise of charity, but that thereafter they increasingly came to refer to having an open mind: there were frequent appeals to the “liberal” and “enlightened” spirit of the times. Those latitudinarians and Dissenters pushing for more toleration in the 1770s were particularly attracted to “liberal” language, and pioneered the idea that “liberality of sentiment” was a necessary accompaniment to the pluralism thrown up by the right of private judgment. Only from the m...
At the beginning of the third century, liberalism was the preferred philosophy. It is not easy to de...
Literary and cultural studies of the US between the 1780s and 1830s have continually faced a unique ...
In recent years the historical relationship between scientific experts and the state has received in...
This article reconsiders the problem of ‘liberal Toryism’ in the 1820s not by looking at the governm...
This paper takes the unexpected position that early liberal thought developed in transformative even...
This article explores the political thought of C. F. G. Masterman (1873–1927), a leading figure in t...
Milbank and Pabst’s account of liberalism as rooted in ontological violence picks out the secret com...
Did late eighteenth-century Americans ever consider themselves liberal? To many historians, this wil...
This article engages with current debates about linguistic usage but in a new way. It examines lingu...
A survey of the negative twentieth- and twenty-first-century critical reception of the Liberal; a su...
The roots of liberalism can be traced back to the late sixteenth or early seventeenth century. It be...
Liberalism has long been depicted as neutral and tolerant. Already in the eighteenth-century, when E...
Historians have devoted a great deal of attention to analysing the vocabularies and political and ph...
This article highlights the potency of traditional popular print culture as a form of political comm...
The unquestionable achievement of J. G. A. Pocock's The Machiavellian Moment was to describe the ret...
At the beginning of the third century, liberalism was the preferred philosophy. It is not easy to de...
Literary and cultural studies of the US between the 1780s and 1830s have continually faced a unique ...
In recent years the historical relationship between scientific experts and the state has received in...
This article reconsiders the problem of ‘liberal Toryism’ in the 1820s not by looking at the governm...
This paper takes the unexpected position that early liberal thought developed in transformative even...
This article explores the political thought of C. F. G. Masterman (1873–1927), a leading figure in t...
Milbank and Pabst’s account of liberalism as rooted in ontological violence picks out the secret com...
Did late eighteenth-century Americans ever consider themselves liberal? To many historians, this wil...
This article engages with current debates about linguistic usage but in a new way. It examines lingu...
A survey of the negative twentieth- and twenty-first-century critical reception of the Liberal; a su...
The roots of liberalism can be traced back to the late sixteenth or early seventeenth century. It be...
Liberalism has long been depicted as neutral and tolerant. Already in the eighteenth-century, when E...
Historians have devoted a great deal of attention to analysing the vocabularies and political and ph...
This article highlights the potency of traditional popular print culture as a form of political comm...
The unquestionable achievement of J. G. A. Pocock's The Machiavellian Moment was to describe the ret...
At the beginning of the third century, liberalism was the preferred philosophy. It is not easy to de...
Literary and cultural studies of the US between the 1780s and 1830s have continually faced a unique ...
In recent years the historical relationship between scientific experts and the state has received in...