Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Citizenship, liberty and community
- Part I Citizenship, populism and liberalism
- 1 Liberalism and direct democracy: John Stuart Mill and the model of ancient Athens
- 2 The limits of liberalism: Liberals and women's suffrage, 1867–1914
- 3 Women, liberalism and citizenship, 1918–1930
- 4 Democracy and popular religion: Moody and Sankey's mission to Britain, 1873–1875
- 5 Disestablishment and democracy, c. 1840–1930
- Part II Economic democracy and the ‘moral economy’ of free trade
- Part III Democracy, organicism and the challenge of nationalism
- Part IV Consciousness and society: the ‘peculiarities of the British’?
- Index
1 - Liberalism and direct democracy: John Stuart Mill and the model of ancient Athens
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 16 September 2009
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of contributors
- Acknowledgements
- Introduction: Citizenship, liberty and community
- Part I Citizenship, populism and liberalism
- 1 Liberalism and direct democracy: John Stuart Mill and the model of ancient Athens
- 2 The limits of liberalism: Liberals and women's suffrage, 1867–1914
- 3 Women, liberalism and citizenship, 1918–1930
- 4 Democracy and popular religion: Moody and Sankey's mission to Britain, 1873–1875
- 5 Disestablishment and democracy, c. 1840–1930
- Part II Economic democracy and the ‘moral economy’ of free trade
- Part III Democracy, organicism and the challenge of nationalism
- Part IV Consciousness and society: the ‘peculiarities of the British’?
- Index
Summary
Liberalism is often described as a body of strictly individualistic doctrines based on, and aimed at, the defence of personal rights and liberties, intended as ‘absence of restraint’. Furthermore, it is usually assumed that there was a ‘crucial moral opposition’ between such individualism and the ‘classical republican’ (Aristotelian) concept of active citizenship typical of democratic and socialist movements. And yet over the past few years this assumption has come under increasing attack from different quarters. Quentin Skinner has demonstrated that the republican tradition included a considerable emphasis on liberal individualism, while more recently I have argued for both a community dimension and a passionate attachment to ‘positive’ liberty as characterising Gladstonian popular liberalism. A question now to be addressed is whether the latter sat midway between the ‘liberal’ and ‘republican’ traditions, or whether the dichotomy between these traditions is just not applicable to British liberalism.
The case of J. S. Mill is almost an ideal one for exploring this question. Not only was he the leading ‘libertarian’ of his day, but he also paved the way towards experiments in collectivism, and by the end of his career was supposed to have become a kind of socialist. Not surprisingly, scholars have long questioned Mill's consistency, as well as the dynamic of what can be seen as his systematic eclecticism. Curiously, the common thread linking the traditions on which Mill drew has been overlooked: it was a version of the ‘classical republican’ model which held the key position in Mill's liberalism, and had wide-ranging implications for his attitudes to the issue of liberty and public control in a free society.
- Type
- Chapter
- Information
- Citizenship and CommunityLiberals, Radicals and Collective Identities in the British Isles, 1865–1931, pp. 21 - 44Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 1996
- 9
- Cited by