1st Edition

Conservatism and the Quarterly Review A Critical Analysis

Edited By Jonathan Cutmore Copyright 2008
    290 Pages
    by Routledge

    290 Pages
    by Routledge

    In its time, the Quarterly Review was thought to closely reflect government policy, however, the essays in this volume reveal that it was inconsistent in its support of government positions and reflected disagreement over a broad range of religious, economic and political issues.

    Introduction, Jonathan Cutmore; Chapter 1 Plotting the Success of the Quarterly Review, Kim Wheatley; Chapter 2 'Sardonic Grins' and 'Paranoid Politics': Religion, Economics, and Public Policy in the Quarterly Review, Boyd Hilton; Chapter 3 A Plurality of Voices in the Quarterly Review, Jonathan Cutmore; Chapter 4 Politics, Culture and Scholarship: Classics in the Quarterly Review, Christopher Stray; Chapter 5 Walter Scott and the Quarterly Review, Sharon Ragaz; Chapter 6 John Barrow, the Quarterly 's Imperial Reviewer, J. M. R. Cameron; Chapter 7 Hung, Drawn and Quarterlyed: Robert Southey, Poetry, Poets and the Quarterly Review, Lynda Pratt; Chapter 8 Robert Southey's Contribution to the Quarterly Review, W. A. Speck;

    Biography

    Jonathan Cutmore