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Making Aristocracy Work Andrew Adonis (Public Policy Correspondent of the Financial Times, and a former Fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford)

Making Aristocracy Work By Andrew Adonis (Public Policy Correspondent of the Financial Times, and a former Fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford)

Summary

A study of the political role and activities of the peerage, both inside and outside Parliament, the late 19th and early 20th century. Andrew Adonis reassesses the strengths and weaknesses of the House of Lords, and shows how its members were able to justify themselves by their work.

Making Aristocracy Work Summary

Making Aristocracy Work: The Peerage and the Political System in Britain, 1884-1914 by Andrew Adonis (Public Policy Correspondent of the Financial Times, and a former Fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford)

Making Aristocracy Work explores the political role of the British peerage in the thirty years before the First World War. It charts its transition from ruling class to embattled faction, analysing the response of the peers to the challenge of democracy and their impact on the constitutional order which emerged from the turbulent politics of the late Victorian and Edwardian era. Andrew Adonis opens with a study of the House of Lords, assessing its strengths and weaknesses as a political institution and offering new interpretations of the constitutional crises of 1884-5 and 1909-11. He goes on to show how, at a time when the anachronism of a hereditary peerage was increasingly recognized, its members were able to justify themselves by their works. A readable book, thoroughly grounded in the aristocracy's rich archives, Making Aristocracy Work is an important contribution to our understanding of the development of Britain's modern political system.

Making Aristocracy Work Reviews

a welcome addition ... scholarly and thorough study Times Literary Supplement
`formidably researched and constantly fascinating book ... He is neither excessively deferential nor uncomprehendingly hostile ... as an account of the late nineteenth and early twentieth-century peerage at work, this book will not be bettered. And it should be read by anyone with an interest in second chambers: past, present - or future.' David Cannadine, The Observer
'scholarly, but quite fascinating, new book The Daily Mail
'This is a very important and salutary book ... it is written with elegance and clarity.' J.H. Plumb, Financial Times
'extraordinary lumber-room of a book ... My first visit to the Other Place, some thirty years ago, remains a vivid memory because the conditions were so similar to those described by Adonis.' London Review of Books
'a welcome addition ... scholarly and thorough study' Contemporary Review
'accomplished book' Times Literary Supplement
This book is more than the history of an institution. It is a study of the career patterns and aspirations of a political class. * Parliamentary History *
Lucidly written and based on a wealth of archives, Andrew Adonis's Making Aristocracy Work ... fires efficiently on three cylinders, as an analysis of a power elite in operation, as a contribution to the still neglected study of how Parliament performed its functions, and as a commentary on the adjustment of pre-1914 British politics to what contemporaries chose to call 'democracy'. * Paul Smith, University of Southampton, EHR Apr.96 *

Table of Contents

Introduction: Peers, power and the constitution. Part 1 The House of Lords: parties, organizations and leadership; the House of Lords as a Second Chamber; private bills and public interests. Part 2 Party politics and public policy: Salisbury's house; the Lords and Edwardian liberalism. Part 3 A governing elite: governing the realm; governing the empire; the will to rule; making aristocracy work. Appendix: The 4th Earl of Carnarvon and his dispositions in the 1880s.

Additional information

GOR010560013
9780198203896
0198203896
Making Aristocracy Work: The Peerage and the Political System in Britain, 1884-1914 by Andrew Adonis (Public Policy Correspondent of the Financial Times, and a former Fellow of Nuffield College, Oxford)
Used - Like New
Hardback
Oxford University Press
1993-05-27
324
N/A
Book picture is for illustrative purposes only, actual binding, cover or edition may vary.
The book has been read, but looks new. The book cover has no visible wear, and the dust jacket is included if applicable. No missing or damaged pages, no tears, possible very minimal creasing, no underlining or highlighting of text, and no writing in the margins

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