Results 41 to 50 of about 247 (133)

Disraeli and the Eastern Question 1875‒78: Finance, Defence and Politics

open access: yesCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
This essay considers an aspect of the great ‘Eastern’ (Ottoman and Balkan) crisis of 1875‒78, which has never been properly treated before: the policies of Disraeli (Earl of Beaconsfield), that secured a great British triumph, at once peaceful and ...
Peter Ghosh
doaj   +1 more source

Alfabetizare politică prin lexic, instituții și modele teoretice englezești: România în a doua jumătate a secolului al XIX-lea (Political Literacy through English Lexic, Institutions and Models. Romania in the Second Hald of the 19th Century) [PDF]

open access: yesPolis: Revista de Stiinte Politice, 2015
The present article endeavours to explore the political terminology of Anglo-Saxon origin, as well as to emphasize the influence of the Anglo-American political model through the analysis of some speeches delivered in various political contexts by the ...
Roxana PATRAȘ
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Authorship and auteurism in Another Country

open access: yesTydskrif vir Letterkunde, 2018
In 1873 Benjamin Disraeli could bemoan, "[a]n author who speaks about his own books is almost as bad as a mother who talks about her own children." Today, however, authorship is a consumable that demands endless promoting in order to be profitable.
Stella Viljoen
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Disraeli and Cobden: ‘The Manchester School’ in Fact and Fiction

open access: yesCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
The mid-nineteenth century’s leading Conservative and pre-eminent Radical politicians (Disraeli and Cobden) at first glance have little in common save for the year of their birth in 1804, the legacy of major scholarly editions of their letters and both ...
Anthony Howe
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Beaconsfieldism and Elysian Fields

open access: yesCahiers Victoriens et Edouardiens
This essay explores the extraordinary come-back that Disraeli and the Conservative party achieved in the election of 1874. Following Gladstone’s decisive victory in 1868 and the death of Derby the following year, Disraeli had largely withdrawn from ...
Thomas Pritchard
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Benjamin Disraeli and the Myth of Sephardi Superiority [PDF]

open access: yesJewish History, 1996
This chapter considers Lady Battersea's observation of Benjamin Disraeli's ideas about race that were central to his self-definition and was consistent with contemporary interpretations of his character and beliefs. It links Disraeli's political behaviour and thinking to his ethnic background, which Lady Battersea called his racial instincts.
openaire   +2 more sources

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