Beyond Party: Cultures of Antipartisanship in Northern Politics before the Civil War (Reconfiguring American Political History)

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Management number 232099886 Release Date 2026/06/18 List Price US$18.95 Model Number 232099886
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Captivating disgruntled voters, third parties have often complicated the American political scene. In the years before the Civil War, third-party politics took the form of the Know Nothings, who mistrusted established parties and gave voice to anti-government sentiment.Originating about 1850 as a nativist fraternal order, the Know Nothing movement soon spread throughout the industrial North. In Beyond Party, Mark Voss-Hubbard draws on local sources in three different states where the movement was especially strong to uncover its social roots and establish its relationship to actual public policy issues. Focusing on the 1852 ten hour movement in Essex County, Massachusetts, the pro-temperance and anti-Catholic agitation in and around Dauphin County, Pennsylvania, and the movement to restrict immigrants' voting rights and overthrow "corrupt parties and politicians" in New London County, Connecticut, he shows that these places shared many of the social problems that occurred throughout the North—the consolidation of capitalist agriculture and industry, the arrival of Irish and German Catholic immigrants, and the changing fortunes of many established political leaders.Voss-Hubbard applies the insights of social history and social movement theory to politics in arguing that we need to understand Know Nothing rhetoric and activism as part of a wider tradition of American suspicion of "politics as usual"—even though, of course, this antipartyism served agendas that included those of self-interested figures seeking to accumulate power. Read more

ASIN B07DFMQL6Q
XRay Not Enabled
ISBN13 978-0801877797
Language English
File size 957 KB
Page Flip Enabled
Publisher Johns Hopkins University Press
Word Wise Enabled
Print length 276 pages
Accessibility Learn more
Part of series Reconfiguring American Political History
Publication date May 22, 2003
Enhanced typesetting Enabled

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