Agents of the People: Democracy and Popular Sovereignty in British and Swedish Parliamentary and Public Debates, 1734-1800

Sprednja platnica
BRILL, 2010 - 530 strani
This book on the pre-history of democratisation shows how and why more modern attitudes to democracy started to emerge in the late eighteenth century. Focusing on the language of parliamentarians, the author reconstructs and compares debates on the political role and representation of the people in Britain and Sweden. His analysis demonstrates not only the persistence of the classical, pejorative, conception of democracy but also the gradual revaluation of the notion prior to the French Revolution. The author analyses the clash between British and French conceptions of democracy as well as the first definitions of the sovereignty of Parliament as the sovereignty of the people. Furthermore, by placing parliamentary discourse in the context of public debates, he reveals the previously ignored evolutionary role that parliaments played in redefining the most crucial concept in Western political theory.
 

Vsebina

Introduction
1
Chapter One British and Swedish Parliamentary Debates in a Comparative Study of Political Vocabularies
29
The Significance of Parliamentary Debates for the History of Political Vocabularies
31
Practical Arrangements and Argumentation
36
Special Features of Parliamentary Rhetoric
41
Ceremonial Speaking and Dialogues between the Powers of the State
45
Methodological Challenges Posed by the Use of Parliamentary Reports and Minutes
50
Chapter Two Variations in British Parliamentary Conceptions of the People 17341771
59
The Concept of Democracy in the Rhetoric of the Deadlocked Parties
220
The Political Role of the People in the Accession Charter and the Nomination of Senators
226
The Concept of the People at the Time of the Coronation and the Royal Coup of 1772
239
Chapter Four The ReEvaluation of the Representation of the People and Democracy in Westminster 17721789
245
The American Crisis Representation and the British People 17721780
246
Democracy of the Pure Swedish and Mixed British Types Debated in the Early 1780s
269
Prospects for a Parliamentary Reform and the Peoples Ministry 17821783
289
Further Debates on Parliamentary Reform 17841785
306

Walpoles Definition of the Limits of Democracy
67
The Standing Army and the Rights of the People in the Late 1730s
78
The Prime Minister Challenged by a Popular Government in 17411742
89
Views on the Excessive and Insufficient Power of the People in the 1740s
104
Consensual Conceptions of the People as Subjects during the Seven Years War
119
The Increasing Relevance of the People in Political Argumentation 17631769
127
Redefinitions of the Relationship between the People Parliament and the Crown in the Aftermath of the John Wilkes Case 17701771
139
Did Popular Sovereignty and Representative Democracy Exist in Sweden before 1772?
157
Interpretations of the Age of Liberty as a Watershed in the Progress of Democracy
160
The Relationship between the Nobility the Nation and the People at the Beginning of the Riksdag of 17691770
175
The Concept of the People in Printed Literature and the Reactions of the Estates to Publicity in the Autumn of 1769
184
The Concept of the People in Debates on the Constitution
190
The Noble Estate and the Meaning of Democracy in the Autumn of 1769
203
Increasing Contestability of the Concept the People during the Riksdag of 17711772
209
Positive Understandings of Democracy before the French Revolution
325
no Comment from Westminster
337
Chapter Five Reactions to the Revolutionary Concepts of Democracy and Popular Sovereignty in Westminster 17891800
343
Initial Responses to the Revolution in Britain
348
The Heated Debate on Democracy in 1790
352
Strengthening Criticism of the French Model of Democracy in 1791
364
Proper British and Extreme French Democracy Contrasted in 1792
375
Combating both French and Domestic Conceptions of Democracy in 1793
392
Reactions to Robespierres Redefinition of Democracy in 1794
409
The Political Rights of the People in a Time of Crisis
423
Calls for Representative Government and Defences of Democracy in 17961797
447
the Sovereignty of Parliament Becomes the Sovereignty of the People
457
Conclusion
471
Bibliography
497

Druge izdaje - Prikaži vse

Pogosti izrazi in povedi

O avtorju (2010)

Pasi Ihalainen, Ph.D. (1999), is a Professor of General History at the University of Jyv skyl, Finland. His previous books include "The Discourse on Political Pluralism in Early Eighteenth-Century England" (1999) on political parties and "Protestant Nations Redefined" (2005) on the modernization of national identities.

Bibliografski podatki