The Language of Democracy: Political Rhetoric in the United States and Britain, 1790-1900

Couverture
University of Virginia Press, 2005 - 264 pages

Tracing the history of political rhetoric in nineteenth-century America and Britain, Andrew W. Robertson shows how modern election campaigning was born. Robertson discusses early political cartoons and electioneering speeches as he examines the role of each nation's press in assimilating masses of new voters into the political system.

Even a decade after the American Revolution, the authors shows, British and American political culture had much in common. On both sides of the Atlantic, electioneering in the 1790s was confined mostly to male elites, and published speeches shared a characteristically Neoclassical rhetoric. As voting rights were expanded, however, politicians sought a more effective medium and style for communicating with less-educated audiences. Comparing changes in the modes of in the two countries, Robertson reconstructs the transformation of campaign rhetoric into forms that incorporated the oral culture of the stump speech as well as elite print culture.

By the end of the nineteenth century, the press had become the primary medium for initiating, persuading, and sustaining loyal partisan audiences. In Britain and America, millions of men participated in a democratic political culture that spoke their language, played to their prejudices, and courted their approval. Today's readers concerned with broadening political discourse to reach a more diverse audience will find rich and intriguing parallels in Robertson's account.

 

Table des matières

Causes Conjunctures
1
The Persistence of
20
Electioneering
36
Jacksonian
68
Parliamentary Reform and Repeal of Constraints
96
The Personality Contest between Gladstone
129
The Loss of Public Principles and Public
146
British
164
Visual Communications
181

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À propos de l'auteur (2005)

Andrew W. Robertson, Associate Professor of History at the City University of New York, is the coeditor, with Jeffrey L. Pasley, of Beyond the Founders: New Approaches to the Political History of the Early American Republic.

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