ABSTRACT

This book offers an examination of responses to Edmund Burke from the last decades of the eighteenth century to the present day, ending with the question whether there is still a role for him to play in post-Thatcher England. It includes a chapter asking the same question about America.

The sharp focus on Burke’s legacy permits the author to cover a great many years while remaining quite concise. Written in an accessible style, modest in length, covering major debates in England over the course of two centuries and more, this book aims to reach out to as many potential readers as possible.

chapter 1|7 pages

Prologue

Burke and Posterity

chapter 2|34 pages

Initial Responses to Burke

Pamphlet Wars of the Eighteenth Century

chapter 3|46 pages

Uses of Burke in the Nineteenth Century

chapter 4|28 pages

Mill to Morley

From the Disappearance to the Triumphal Reinstatement of Burke

chapter 6|27 pages

The Americanization of Burke?