Critics and Crusaders

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abolitionist movements
Albert Brisbane
american
American liberty
American Railway Union
apostolic crusader
Business Enterprise
Category=NH
Chairs Men
Contemporary Society
economic justice theory
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Eugene Victor Debs
Fireman
follette
Free Federation
freedom
Garrison's criticism
Good Life
Governor Altgeld
Human Suffering
Individualist Anarchists
Intercollegiate Socialist Society
John Peter
labor
labor activism history
libertarian traditions
Locomotive Firemen
Mad Venture
nineteenth century American radicalism
party
phillips
Pipe Lines
political freedom
quest
radical political thought
railway
Revolutionary Industrial Union
Robert Minor
slavery
Social Crusader
social reform movements
socialist
Socialist Labor Party
Van Wyck Brooks
Waiden Pond
wendell
William McKinleys
Young Men

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138521575
  • Weight: 453g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 06 Oct 2017
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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The quest for freedom has always been a defining characteristic of the American people. That neither constitutionalism nor capitalism has secured complete freedom for every person is demonstrated by media announcements of slavery, oppression, exploitation, and a variety of shortcomings in the economic system. That said, and as this volume seeks to demonstrate through a history of radical commentaries, there have always been bold spirits who fight for such ambitious heights.With changing times, freedom meant different things to those who worked for it. This book in its broadest sense is a history of libertarianism. Each of the libertarians in this full study, extending from William Lloyd Garrison to Eugene V. Debs, fought for the ideal of political economy as a practical ideal. In so doing these major figures at the margins of power expanded the entire field of human rights. Charles A. Madison concludes that radicalism became an ideology in the search for freedom.The zeal and activity of these figures did much to attain the political freedom and economic well- being that Americans are inclined to take for granted. These individual chapters are set in frames supplied by background sketches of the movements each group led, and the whole is an attempt to depict and re-evaluate America's social progress without the rigor or formality of impersonalized history.