Abstract
The popular mobilization of the post-war years was followed by a period of critical self-analysis and internal dissension — a sequence subsequently familiar to the Chartists — as conflicting conclusions were drawn from the failure and decline of mass agitation. Other factors contributed to the revisionist mood of the 1820s, a time when a new pattern of economic fluctuation and distress was beginning to assert itself. Confronted by the industrial trade cycle, popular radicals rethought their ideology in conflict with the advanced guard of middle-class ‘philosophic radicals’, Utilitarian and didactic popularizers of Ricardian political economy. Popular radicals, however, failed to regain the initiative as ‘public opinion’, a middle-class construction, became increasingly ‘liberal’ and influential.
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Notes
John Belchem, ‘Orator’ Hunt: Henry Hunt and English Working-Class Radicalism (Oxford, 1985), pp. 151–7.
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See also, Stewart Weaver, John Fielden and the Politics of Popular Radicalism 1832–1847 (Oxford, 1987), pp. 81–112;
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P. Hollis, The Pauper Press: A Study in Working-class Radicalism of the 1830s (Oxford, 1970);
Joel Wiener, The War of the Unstamped. The Movement to Repeal the British Newspaper Tax, 1830–1836 (Ithaca, 1969).
Frank O’Gorman, ‘The Unreformed Electorate of Hanoverian England: The Mid-Eighteenth Century to the Reform Act of 1832’, Social History, 11 (1986), pp. 44–7.
B. L. Kinzer, The Ballot Question in Nineteenth-Century English Politics (New York, 1982), pp. 16–50.
Gareth Stedman Jones, ‘Rethinking Chartism’ in his Languages of Class: Studies in English Working Class History 1832–1982 (Cambridge, 1983), pp. 174–5.
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© 1996 John Belchem
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Belchem, J. (1996). Ideology, Public Opinion and Reform, 1820–35. In: Popular Radicalism in Nineteenth-Century Britain. Social History in Perspective. Palgrave, London. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-24390-7_5
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