Reviews'Important and fresh, this book presents new material on the pre-history of the Labour party, bridging a gap between the years of the Reform League in the 1860s and the so-called revival of socialism in the 1880s.'<br />
Miles Taylor
'This is a well researched and important study, it deserves to be widely read.'<br />
<i>Chartist,</i> No 268
'...a splendid piece of meticulous historical scholarship casting new light on a pivotal and often neglected period of British political and working-class history.'<br /><i>American Historical Review</i><br />
'[By consulting widely and deeply unpublished manuscripts] Owen gives properly wait to [engaging] analysis of the connections between the linguistic, and the political and cultural environments.'
<p>William C. Lubenow,<i> Journal of Liberal History</i></p>
'The research is meticulous, delving into the intricate workings of organizations and personal connections among labor and Liberal leaders. Throughout the book, realities at the grass-roots prevail. Owen successfully captures the fluidity of popular politics and the assertiveness that often underscored labor's cooperation with the Liberal party.'
<p>James Epstein, <i>Victorian Studies</i>, Vol. 58, No. 3</p>
Reviews'Owen makes a significant contribution to the study of the relationship between the Liberal Party and the working class following the electoral reform of 1867.'<br />
Detlev Mares, <i>H-Soz-Kult</i>
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Introduction
- 1. The struggle for political representation: labour candidates and the Liberal party, 1868–1876
- 2. Activism, identity and networks: urban and rural working-class radicalism, 1868–1874
- 3. Labour’s response to the caucus: class, America and language, 1877–1885
- 4. Tensions and fault lines: the Lib-Lab MPs, the wider labour movement, and the role of Irish nationalism, 1885–1888
- 5. Rethinking the ‘revival of socialism’: socialists, Liberals and the caucus, 1881–1888
- Epilogue
- Appendix I
- Appendix II
- Bibliography
- Index