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Liberal Worlds: James Bryce and the Democratic Intellect

(Hardback)


Publishing Details

Full Title:

Liberal Worlds: James Bryce and the Democratic Intellect

Contributors:

By (Author) H. S. Jones

ISBN:

9780691180113

Publisher:

Princeton University Press

Imprint:

Princeton University Press

Publication Date:

25th February 2026

Country:

United States

Classifications

Readership:

Tertiary Education

Fiction/Non-fiction:

Non Fiction

Other Subjects:

Political leaders and leadership
Political science and theory
Political ideologies and movements

Physical Properties

Physical Format:

Hardback

Number of Pages:

408

Dimensions:

Width 155mm, Height 235mm

Description

The intellectual biography of a Victorian Liberal polymath

James Bryce (18381922) was a leading figure in Britain's Liberal Party and a distinguished historian, a versatile scholar-politician who moved seamlessly between academia and politics. He was, among many other things, a cabinet minister and a popular ambassador, an expert on American politics and on Roman law, an advocate for the Armenian people and an architect of the League of Nations, a world traveller and a climber of Mount Ararat. In LiberalWorlds, Stuart Jones offers an intellectual biography of Bryce, tracing a Scots-Ulster Presbyterian's assimilation to the increasingly multiconfessional Victorian state, and a late Victorian Liberal's encounter with the wider world. Jones shows how a polymathic intelligence grappled with a dizzyingly wide range of concerns and issues, including the challenges of democracy and race relations, the rise of modern universities and the reconstruction of the international order after World War I.

In tracing the evolution of Bryce's thought, Liberal Worlds illuminates the international intellectual networks and the many places across the globe that shaped his thinking. Jones considers, for example, why a man who had a lifelong revulsion against slavery seemed to accept racial segregation in the American South; how a vigorous activist for girls' and women's education became a tenacious parliamentary critic of women's suffrage; and why, over the objections of his Ulster Presbyterian family, he backed Irish home rule. Above all, Jones rescues Bryce-immensely influential in his time, now little remembered-from being consigned to a historical pigeonhole, restoring him to the centre of late-nineteenth- and early twentieth-century debates over the nature of democratic politics.

Author Bio

Stuart Jones is professor of intellectual history at the University of Manchester. He is the author of The French State in Question: Public Law and Political Argument in the Third Republic, Victorian Political Thought, and Intellect and Character in Victorian England: Mark Pattison and the Invention of the Don.

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