ABSTRACT

This second volume considers various socialist impulses and developments after the collapse of the Owenite movement in Britain. Interventions by some leading Christian Socialists will illuminate one important tendency; publications by O’Brien another less vital strand. Central to this volume, however, will be far less well-known pamphlets, book extracts and articles in the periodical press by national and local co-operative writers and activists, who appropriated and transformed the legacy of utopian socialism in the second half of the nineteenth century. Old Owenites are naturally included, though more emphasis is given to reworkings by a younger generation of co-operators, now mostly forgotten. The volume will also cover relationships and controversies between co-operators and late nineteenth century state socialists, who attempted to portray the co-operative movement as merely diversionary for the working class.

chapter |19 pages

Introduction

Socialism and co-operation in Britain, 1850–1918

part 1|55 pages

Redefining Socialism

part 2|38 pages

Political Economy

part 3|96 pages

Class, Democracy and the State

chapter 24|3 pages

Justice, 10 May 1913, 7

part 4|39 pages

Utopianism and the Religion of Co-operation

part 5|32 pages

Gender and Consumer Organising

part 6|25 pages

Internationalism, Empire and War

part 7|48 pages

The Sense of the Past