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04795cam a2200349 a 4500 |
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99823927704151 |
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20241030105259.0 |
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180307s2018 nju b 001 0 eng |
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|a 2018937066
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|a 9780691203966
|q (pbk.)
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|a 0691203962
|q (pbk.)
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|a 9780691170701
|q (cloth)
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|a 0691170703
|q (cloth)
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|a 9780691184135
|q (electronic book)
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|a 0691184135
|q (electronic bk.)
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|a (OCoLC)1028166609
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|a (OCoLC)on1028166609
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|a DLC
|c DLC
|d BDX
|d QGJ
|d YDX
|d EZN
|d OCLCF
|d STF
|d U@S
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|a pcc
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|a U@SA
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|a JC574
|b .R67 2018
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|a 320.5109
|2 23
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|a Rosenblatt, Helena,
|d 1961-
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|a The lost history of liberalism :
|b from ancient Rome to the twenty-first century /
|c Helena Rosenblatt.
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|a Princeton :
|b Princeton University Press,
|c c2018.
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|a xii, 348 p. ;
|c 23 cm.
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|a Incluye referencias bibliográficas (p. 311-331) e índice.
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|a What It Meant to Be Liberal from Cicero to Lafayette -- The French Revolution and the Origins of Liberalism, 1789-1830 -- Liberalism, Democracy, and the Emergence of the Social Question, 1830-48 -- The Question of Character -- Caesarism and Liberal Democracy: Napoleon III, Lincoln, Gladstone, and Bismarck -- The Battle to Secularize Education -- Two Liberalisms: Old and New -- Liberalism Becomes the American Creed.
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|a What it meant to be liberal from Cicero to Lafayette: Republican beginnings: a moral and civic ideal ; Medieval rearticulations: liberality christianized ; Renaissance Liberal Arts ; The politics of giving ; Protestant developments ; American exceptionalism and the Liberal tradition ; Thomas Hobbes and John Locke on liberality ; Enlightenment liberality ; Enlightenment transformations ; liberal theology and liberal christianity ; Liberality politicized ; From liberal charters to liberal constitutions ; America, the most liberal country in the world -- The French Revolution and the origins of liberalism, 1789-1830: The liberal principles of Benjamin Constant and Madame de Staël ; Enter Napoleon ; Liberal parties and the birth of liberalism ; Liberalism theorized ; Liberalism confronts reaction ; Liberal insurrection ism ; Liberal economic principles ; Liberal exclusions -- Liberalism, Democracy, and the emergence of the social question, 1830-48: The liberal government turns conservative ; Liberals on democracy ; Liberals and insurrection, again ; Liberals face the "social question" ; Laissez-Faire and liberalism ; The many necessary functions of government ; Liberals on colonies ; The liberal battle with religion ; The socialist critique of liberal religion -- The question of character: The Debacle of 1848 ; Liberals battle socialism ; Retreat and reaction ; Pius IX -- The problem of selfishness ; The rise of the British Liberal Party ; Laissez-Faire versus Bildung ; The role of the family ; The religion of humanity -- Caesarism and Liberal democracy: Napoleon III, Lincoln, Gladstone, and Bismarck. Napoleon III and Caesarism ; Abraham Lincoln and his liberal friends throughout the world ; The Liberal Republican Party ; Gladstone, Liberal icon ; Bismarck, Liberalism's gravedigger -- The battle to secularize education. What's wrong with the French? ; A liberal public school system ; The National Liberal League, free thought, and free love -- The Pope strikes back -- Two Liberalisms: old and new: The role of the state reimagined ; Liberal socialism ; A moral way of life ; Liberal Eugenics ; Feminism and liberalism at the end of the Nineteenth Century -- Liberalism becomes the American creed. A liberal empire ; Racialization of the Anglo-Saxon myth ; From an Anglo-Saxon to an Anglo-American liberal empire ; The question of government intervention -- Epilogue: Liberalism and the Totalitarian threat ; The turn to rights ; The (supposed) illiberalism of France and Germany.
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|a "The Lost History of Liberalism challenges our most basic assumptions about a political creed that has become a rallying cry - and a term of derision - in today's increasingly divided public square. Taking readers from ancient Rome to today, Helena Rosenblatt traces the evolution of the words "liberal" and "liberalism," revealing the heated debates that have taken place over their meaning. In this timely and provocative book, Rosenblatt debunks the popular myth of liberalism as a uniquely Anglo-American tradition centered on individual rights. It was only during the Cold War and America's growing world hegemony that liberalism was refashioned into an American ideology focused so strongly on individual freedoms."--Descripción del editor.
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|a Liberalism
|x History.
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650 |
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|a Liberalismo
|x Historia.
|2 UDESA
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