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An account of the course and development of the Irish Land War itself is provided in this chapter. It examines the political and social role of the Land League alongside its particular diagnoses of Ireland’s economic and political malaise. The role of radical language, particularly discussion of the right to life and self-preservation, on Land League platforms is analysed. This is looked at in conjunction with the responses to the varying solutions to the Land question, such as peasant proprietorship and the ‘Three F’s’, as well as Gladstone’s 1881 Land Act. Labourers, both rural and urban, and their relationship to the Land League are considered. Finally, the chapter assesses the implications of the different forms of collective resistance to the institutions of landed proprietorship in Ireland, particularly boycotting, and considers these as examples of political ideals in action. It argues that such practices reinforced the same principles as those expressed discursively.
This conclusion draws together the central themes of the book, laying out how George and the Irish Land War helped to further drive liberals, conservatives, and socialists towards an organicist utilitarian politics. It also offers a brief summary of the subsequent trajectory of the land question and some of its orientating politics in Ireland, Britain, and the Unitec States. The conclusion discusses why the late nineteenth century remains such a critical moment for contemporary discussion of liberalism and democracy.
Irish land in the 1880s was a site of ideological conflict, with resonances for liberal politics far beyond Ireland itself. The Irish Land War, internationalised partly through the influence of Henry George, the American social reformer and political economist, came at a decisive juncture in Anglo-American political thought, and provided many radicals across the North Atlantic with a vision of a more just and morally coherent political economy. Looking at the discourses and practices of these agrarian radicals, alongside developments in liberal political thought, Andrew Phemister shows how they utilised the land question to articulate a natural and universal right to life that highlighted the contradictions between liberty and property. In response to this popular agrarian movement, liberal thinkers discarded many older individualistic assumptions, and their radical democratic implications, in the name of protecting social order, property, and economic progress. Land and Liberalism thus vividly demonstrates the centrality of Henry George and the Irish Land War to the transformation of liberal thought.
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