Stanley Pierson. Marxism and the Origins of British Socialism. The Struggle for a New Consciousness.
Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 1973.
310 páginas.
Contents
Introduction
PART I
The British Sources: Quest for a New Consciousness in Nineteenth-Century Britain
1 – Anglican and Nonconformist Visions of a Christian Commonwealth
2 – The Romantic Social Vision: Carlyle and Ruskin
3 – Aspirations for a Rational Community: Utilitarians, Owenites, and Secularists
PART II
Transformations of Marxism
4 – The Reception of Marxism in Britain
Henry Mayers Hyndman and the Formative Years of British Social Democracy
William Morris: The Marxist as Utopian
Two Prophets of a Socialist World View: Ernest Belfort Bax and Edward Carpenter
5 – The Fabians
Thomas Davidson and the Fellowship of the New Life
Fabian Beginnings and Sidney Webb
The Hampstead Group: From Marxism to Fabianism
Fabians in the Early Nineties
6 – Ethical Socialism
John Bruce Glasier and the Poetic Impulse in British Socialism
“Nunquam” and Merrie England
Socialism and the “New Women”
Social Democrats and the Problem of Sentiment
7 – The Realists
Marxism and the Working Classes: H. H. Champion, Friedrich Engels, and J. L. Mahon
Marxists Adrift: John Burns and Tom Mann
Keir Hardie: The Realist as Ethical Prophet
Formation and Early Growth of the Independent Labour Party
PART III
The Challenge of Politics
8 – Divergent Strategies Rejection of Politics, Anarchism, and Tolstoyism
The “Religion of Socialism”: John Trevor and the Labour Churches
9 – The Testing Years, 1895-1900
Decline of Socialist Enthusiasm
The Process of Political Accommodation and the Role of Ramsay MacDonald
Conclusion