Mill on Civilization and Barbarism

Mill on Civilization and Barbarism book cover

Mill on Civilization and Barbarism

Author(s): Michael Levin (Author)

  • Publisher: Routledge
  • Publication Date: 10 Jun. 2004
  • Edition: 1st
  • Language: English
  • Print length: 164 pages
  • ISBN-10: 0714655902
  • ISBN-13: 9780714655901

Book Description

John Stuart Mill’s best-known work is On Liberty (1859). In it he declared that Western society was in danger of coming to a standstill. To understand how Mill came to this conclusion requires one to investigate his notion of the stages from barbarism to civilisation, and also his belief in imperialism as part of the civilising process. This study encompasses discourses on the blessings, curses and dangers of modernisation from approximately the time of the American and French revolutions to that of the so-called mid-Victorian calm in which On Liberty was written. Current political issues concerning the West and Islamic countries have heightened interest in just the kind of question that this book discusses: that of how the West relates to, and assesses, the rest of the world.

Editorial Reviews

Review

“A penetrating study of an under-explored, but crucial, Victorian theme – Levin sheds much light on the concept often held to underpin Victorian thought, ‘progress’, by investigating both how its most famous exponent developed an account of what separated ‘civilisation’ from ‘barbarism’, and how it was possible not only to emerge from the latter to the former, but equally to fall back from civility to barbarity or a stagnant ‘stationary’ condition by failing to cultivate and reinforce a ‘striving, go-ahead’ entrepreneurial personality and British national character. This is a major study of one of the period’s great themes which skilfully weaves together an account of Mill’s political, philosophical, historical and imperial concerns.”
-Gregory Claeys, University of London

About the Author

Michael Levin is Senior Lecturer in Politics at Goldsmith’s College, University of London. He previously taught at the Universities of Leicester, Leeds and Wales and has been twice Visiting Professor of Sociology at San Diego State University. He is the author of Marx, Engels and Liberal Democracy (1989), The Spectre of Democracy: The Rise of Modern Democracy as Seen by its Critics (1992), and The Conditions of England Question: Carlyle, Mill, Engels (1998).

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