James Epstein – The Lion of Freedom

Feargus O'Connor and the Chartist Movement, 1832-1842

£17.00

This book offers an evaluation of the political leadership of Feargus O’Connor, the most prominent leader of the Chartist movement.

This study covers the period from 1832-1842 — from O’Connor’s election to Parliament through to the establishment of his ascendency over the national leadership of the Chartist movement. Central to this study is a consideration of the principal institutions of national radical leadership, organisation and agitation — the platform and the mass demonstration, the Chartist Press and National Charter Association. While O’Connor came to prominence in the familiar role of the radical gentleman orator at the mass demonstration which heralded the advent of Chartism, he was able to turn his appeal as a charismatic demagogue towards the creation of more permanent and democratic forms of working-class organisation and leadership.

Not simply a political biography of O’Connor, this book offers a general history of Chartism and provides an interpretive framework for understanding this complex political movement.

Preface
Acknowledgements

1 The Constitutionalist Idiom
2 Narrating Liberty’s Defence
T. J. Wooler and the Law
3 Understanding the Cap of Liberty
Symbolic Practice and Social Conflict in Early-Nineteenth-Century England
4 Reason’s Republic
Richard Carlile, Zetetic Culture, and Infidel Stylistics
5 Rituals of Solidarity
Radical Dining, Toasting, and Symbolic Expression

Notes
Index

James Epstein is Distingished Professor of History, Depart of History, Vanderbilt University, Nashville, Tennessee. His other books include Radical Expression: Political Language, Ritual, and Symbol in England, 1790-1850, In Practice: Studies in the Language and Culture of Popular Politics in Modern Britain, and Scandal of Colonial Rule: Power and Subversion in the British Atlantic During the Age of Revolution.