A Polite and Commercial People: England 1727-1783 (New Oxford History of England)
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Average customer review:Product Description
Drawing on up-to-date research, this volume in The New Oxford History of England is the most authoritative and comprehensive general history of England between the accession of George II and the loss of the American colonies. Delving beneath the surface serenity of the age of elegance, Paul Langford reveals a world of simmering discontent in which evangelical enthusiasm clashed with scientific rationalism, aristocratic government with popular insubordination, industrial and imperial expansion with plebian poverty, and sentimentality with utilitarian reform.
Product Details
- Amazon Sales Rank: #67773 in Books
- Published on: 1992-03-19
- Original language: English
- Number of items: 1
- Binding: Paperback
- 832 pages
Editorial Reviews
Observer
`fascinating...carried through with great skill and clarity...the summaries of historical controversies are judicious and well-informed'
Review
...fascinating...carried through with great skill and clarity...the summaries of historical controversies are judicious and well-informed (Observer )
About the Author
Provost of Lincoln College, Oxford
Customer Reviews
An outstanding survey of 18th century England
In 1934, Oxford University Press published the first volume in the 'Oxford History of England' series. As subsequent volumes came out over the next 31 years, they came to serve as indispensable surveys of English history, the natural starting point for anyone interested in England's past and a powerful force influencing our understanding of it. Yet as the state of historical scholarship evolved, gradually the volumes became outdated in terms of their presentation and interpretation of the past. In response, Oxford launched a 'New Oxford History of England' series, of which Paul Langford's book is the inaugural title.
In it Langford presents a wide-ranging history of England from the accession of George II to the loss of the American colonies. He presents the era as a chaotic one, with the country still coping with the consequences of the Glorious Revolution, which let a deep impression upon politics and society. Though the aristocracy remained the dominant group in many respects, the author sees the middle class increasingly coming to play a vital role in English life as the century progressed. In an age of commercial prosperity, their"polite" values increasingly contested with those of the upper class, setting the stage for their gradual assertion as the dominant segment of society in the century that followed.
Langford's book is an outstanding survey of Hanoverian England, one that draws upon an impressive range of scholarship. Though his main focus is on the politics and society of the period, very little escapes his coverage, as economics, art, and literature also are addressed within its pages. Though he presumes that his readers possess some prior knowledge of his subject (the mini biographies of people offered in footnotes in the old series are absent here), his analysis and arguments are clear and forcefully made. The understanding he provides of the era makes his book a critical resource on the subject, and a worthy successor volume to those from the venerable old series.



