The Age of Atonement: Influence of Evangelicalism on Social and Economic Thought, 1795-1865 (Clarendon Paperbacks)

by Boyd Hilton

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This book examines the mentality of the upper and middle classes during the first half of the nineteenth century. This was an age obsessed by the idea of catastrophe; by wars, famines, pestilences, revolutions, floods, volcanoes, and - especially - the great commercial upheavals which periodically threatened to topple the world's first capitalist system. Thanks to the dominant evangelical ethos of the day, such sufferings seemed to be part of God's plan, and governments took a harsh stand-on-your-own-feet attitude to social underdogs, whether they were bankrupts or paupers, in order not to interfere with such dispensations of providence. Free Trade was adopted, not as the agent of growth it was later seen to be, but in order to restrain an economy which seemed to be racing out of control. In the 1850s and 1860s, however, a different attitude to social problems developed, along with evolutionary approaches to the physical and animal worlds and a new understanding of God, who came to be regarded less as an Arnoldian head master and more like Santa Claus. At the centre of this new ideology, and throwing light on it, was a new way of understanding it.
  • ISBN10 0198201079
  • ISBN13 9780198201076
  • Publish Date 24 March 1988 (first published 1 January 1986)
  • Publish Status Out of Print
  • Out of Print 12 February 1993
  • Publish Country GB
  • Publisher Oxford University Press
  • Imprint Clarendon Press
  • Format Hardcover
  • Pages 420
  • Language English