Disraeli Myth

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Title
A01=Emily Jones
Author_Emily Jones
Baldwin
Benjamin Disraeli
Buckle
Burke
capitalism
Category=JPA
Category=JPF
Category=NH
Category=QDTS
Chamberlain
Churchill
Collectivism
conservatism
Conservative
Conservative Party
Constitutional
democracy
Democratic
Disraeli
Disraelian
Distinctive
Edwardian
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eq_history
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eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Faire
forthcoming
Hammonds
Historical
historiography
history of ideas
Hollywood
Imperial
industrial revolution
Industrialisation
Interpretation
Interwar
Jewish
Jewish history
Jewishness
Kebbel
Labour
labour history
Laissez
Laissez faire
Legacy
Legislation
Liberal
literary criticism
Milner
Novels
Oastler
Parliamentary
Party
political culture
Primrose
Primrose league
Protection
Radical
Sadler
Shaftesbury
Smith
social reform
Socialism
Socialist
Statesman
Sybil
Tariff
Tariff reform
Tory
Tory democracy
Toryism
Toynbee
Unionist
Unity
Victorian

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691246314
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 02 Jun 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Tracing the multifaceted construction and deployment of the Disraeli myth and its legacy in Conservative (and conservative) politics

During his lifetime, Benjamin Disraeli, the late-Victorian Conservative Prime Minister (and popular novelist), was often branded as unprincipled and opportunistic—claims that were frequently laced with antisemitism. Yet in the century following his death in 1881, Disraeli’s life and ideas were appropriated, reconstructed and circulated to cast him as the founder of a socially minded “One Nation” brand of British conservatism. In this compelling study, Emily Jones traces the mythologising that made Disraeli a touchstone for Conservative (and conservative) politics. Jones shows how each generation and its political thinkers—from Karl Marx to Margaret Thatcher—has made and remade Disraeli in its own image, seeing in him a source of inspiration or legitimation in different contexts and in support of disparate policies.

Drawing on sources that range from political speeches to Hollywood films, Jones charts the posthumous transformation of Disraeli into a paragon of “One Nation” conservatism. A mythical Disraeli was invoked by contemporaries developing distinctly Tory conceptions of democracy, empire and social policy that nonetheless reaffirmed the importance of social hierarchy, private property and low taxation. As the two-party system began to realign around an axis of welfare and economic management in the interwar period, Disraeli’s political utility reached its zenith—a position, Jones shows, significantly bolstered by new interpretations of Disraeli’s Jewishness, the emerging university disciplines of history and English literature and the rise of the Labour Party. Jones’s authoritative account offers an illuminating new perspective on the role historical narratives have had in shaping accounts of political reality, ideology and identity in modern Britain.

Emily Jones is senior lecturer in modern history at the University of Manchester and the author of the prize-winning Edmund Burke and the Invention of Modern Conservatism, 1830–1914: An Intellectual History. She has written for such publications as The New Statesman, The Financial Times and History Today and she has appeared on BBC Radio 4, ORF Austria and ABC Australia.