ABSTRACT

Louis Hartz is best known for his classic study, The Liberal Tradition in America. At Harvard University, his lecture course on nineteenth-century politics and ideologies was memorable. Through the editorial hand of Paul Roazen, we can now share the experience of Hartz's considerable contributions to the theory of politics.

At the root of Hartz's work is the belief that revolution is not produced by misery, but by pressure of a new system on an old one. This approach enables him to explain sharp differences in revolutionary traditions. Because America essentially was a liberal society from its beginning and had no need for revolutions, America also lacked reactionaries, and lacked a tradition of genuine conservatism characteristic of European thought.

In lectures embracing Rousseau, Burke, Comte, Hegel, Mill, and Marx among others, Hartz develops a keen sense of the delicate balance between the role of the state in both enhancing and limiting personal freedom. Hartz notably insisted on the autonomy of intellectual life and the necessity of individual choice as an essential ingredient of liberty.

part I|47 pages

The Revolutionary Background

chapter 1|7 pages

Origins

chapter 2|7 pages

The Religious Problem

chapter 3|7 pages

The Economic Question

chapter 4|7 pages

Culture and Tradition: Condorcet

chapter 5|6 pages

Jean-Jacques Rousseau

chapter 6|7 pages

Rousseau and Our Constructive Problem

part II|50 pages

Reaction and Authoritarianism

chapter 7|5 pages

The Setting

chapter 8|5 pages

Romanticism

chapter 9|8 pages

Edmund Burke

chapter 10|8 pages

Joseph de Maistre

chapter 11|4 pages

Louis de Bonald

chapter 12|6 pages

Auguste Comte

chapter 13|6 pages

Georg W. F. Hegel

part III|42 pages

Liberalism

chapter 15|4 pages

The Problem of Industrial Society

chapter 16|5 pages

Bentham’s Utilitarianism

chapter 17|6 pages

John Stuart Mill

chapter 18|6 pages

Pierre-Paul Royer-Collard

chapter 19|6 pages

Benjamin Constant

chapter 20|5 pages

Italy and Mazzini

chapter 21|6 pages

Historic Success and Failure

part IV|23 pages

Socialism

chapter 22|6 pages

Robert Owen

chapter 23|5 pages

François Fourier

chapter 24|6 pages

Karl Marx

chapter |3 pages

Conclusion