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Joseph Carne-Ross
Overview of conservatism in the United Kingdom
This is a dynamic list and may never be able to satisfy particular standards for completeness. You can help by adding missing items with reliable sources.
Along with liberalism and socialism, it is one of the major political ideologies in the UK.
Entries on the list must have achieved notability after the writing of Reflections on the Revolution in France which is often seen as the starting point of conservatism.[7]
Philosopher and statesman, generally understood as part of a liberal tradition,[8] but sometimes associated with a 20th-century movement called modern conservatism
The son of a high church Anglican, Olivier was a lifelong Conservative. In 1983, he wrote to congratulate Margaret Thatcher following her victory in that year's General Election.[105]
^Bale, Tim (2011). The Conservative Party: From Thatcher to Cameron. p. 145.
^Greenblatt, Stephen (2012). The Norton Anthology of English Literature: The Romantic Period. New York: W.W. Norton & Company, Inc. p. 187. ISBN 978-0-39391252-4.
^Dennis O'Keeffe; John Meadowcroft (2009). Edmund Burke. Continuum. p. 93. ISBN 978-0-8264-2978-0.
^Andrew Heywood, Political Ideologies: An Introduction. Third Edition. (Palgrave Macmillan, 2003), p. 74.
^F. P. Lock, Edmund Burke. Volume II: 1784–1797 (Clarendon Press, 2006), p. 585.
^The Ordinary Experience of Civilized Life: Sidgwick's Politics and the Method of Reflective Analysis, in
Essays on Henry Sidgwick, ed. by Bart Schultz (Cambridge, 1992), pp. 333-67, at pp. 349-52
^Mallett, Phillip. "Dorothy Richardson Jones, 'King of Critics': George Saintsbury, 1845-1933, Critic, Journalist, Historian, Professor." Nineteenth-Century Prose, vol. 21, no. 1, spring 1994, pp. 119
^Soffer, Reba N.(2009). History, Historians, and Conservatism in Britain and America: From the Great War to Thatcher and Reagan pg. 52-53
^Ebenstein, Alan O. (2003). Hayek's Journey: the mind of Friedrich Hayek (First Palgrave Macmillan ed.). New York: Palgrave Macmillan. ISBN 978-1-4039-6038-2.
^Caldwell, Bruce (2004). Hayek's Challenge: an intellectual biography of F.A. Hayek. Chicago: University of Chicago Press. ISBN 0-226-09193-7.
^Schmidtz, David; Boettke, Peter (Summer 2021). "Friedrich Hayek". Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy.
^Gamble, Andrew (1996). Hayek: The Iron Cage of Liberty. Routledge. p. 1. ISBN 978-0-367-00974-8.
^Soffer, Reba N.(2009). History, Historians, and Conservatism in Britain and America: From the Great War to Thatcher and Reagan Pg. 86–109
^Carter, Stephen G. (2006) Historian of the spirit: an introduction to the life and ideas of Christopher H. Dawson, 1889-1970, Durham theses, Durham University. Page 10
^Soffer, Reba N.(2009). History, Historians, and Conservatism in Britain and America: From the Great War to Thatcher and Reagan ch. 6, pg. 179
^Rosenthal, John. "London of John Constable". Encyclopedia Britannica. An economic depression after the Napoleonic Wars had led to agrarian riots, and yet Constable, a loyal Tory, chose to portray an abstracted, well-ordered English society that was untouched by the industrial and social changes surrounding him.
^Graham-Dixon, Andrew (November 13, 2005). "Samuel Palmer: Vision and Landscape". The Telegraph. Palmer was as conservative in his political and religious beliefs as he was revolutionary in his artistic methods.
^Hudson, Mark (24 June 2013). "LS Lowry: there's more to him than matchstick men". The Telegraph. A tall, ungainly man in a raincoat who tramped the Salford streets, a rent-collector by day and an artist by night, a lifelong Tory voter and teetotaller, who lived with his mother and never formed relationships with women, Lowry is seen as a social and cultural curiosity: a naive outsider, whose relentlessly repetitive work hints at an intellectual and emotional constriction, an Asperger's-like precocity. He's universally known in this country, but means pretty much nothing anywhere else. {{cite news}}: no-break space character in |quote= at position 495 (help)
^Lybarger, Jeremy (21 April 2021). "The Turbulent Life of Francis Bacon". The New Republic. Bacon was a conservative at heart—when drunk, he'd sometimes lambaste poor people for their supposed weakness—but his art, as channeled through his queerness, cast a critical, if oblique, eye on the prevailing culture.
^Brown, Neal (5 May 1998). "Francis Bacon". Frieze. Bacon's often very beautiful, grandee swirlings and sexualised skidmarks of paint are depictive of certain principal categories of subject. These are either other right-wing libertines like himself, or suicides and alcoholics – alcoholics, of course, just being suicides in slow motion.
^DeCurtis, Anthony (1 December 1988). "Steve Winwood: From Mr. Fantasy to Mr. Entertainment". Rolling Stone. His experimental records had never reached much of an audience, and his solo album entered a musical and social culture that seemed to have no place for him or his increasingly conservative values.
^Beckett, Francis (2005). "The tragedy of Vivien Leigh". Laurence Olivier. Life & Times. Haus Publishing. pp. 73–92. ISBN 978-1-904950-38-7. JSTORj.ctt1rv6235.7.
^Sinyard, Neil. "Forbes, Bryan (1926-2013)". Screenonline. Undoubtedly his most controversial screenplay - and arguably his best - was for Guy Green's The Angry Silence (1960), in which Richard Attenborough is 'sent to Coventry' by his workmates after refusing to join an unofficial strike. Left-wing critics were outraged by the film's portrayal of the unions and its caricatured communists, but Forbes (who politically has always leaned to the right) maintained that he achieved a fair balance by portraying the management as equally crass.
^Kuczynski, Alex (October 16, 2000). "Media, Actor Sees Politics in Editing of Film". New York Times. And Mr. Oldman, who in real life is politically conservative, is furious. In the November issue of Premiere magazine, Mr. Oldman and his manager, Douglas Urbanski, also a producer of the film, argue that DreamWorks massaged the movie's editing process so that Mr. Oldman's character is portrayed as a villain, not as the multifaceted Republican hero Mr. Oldman agreed to play.
^Gardner, Martin (2000). Introduction to The annotated Alice: Alice's adventures in Wonderland & Through the looking glass. W. W. Norton & Company. p. xv. ISBN 0-517-02962-6.
^McKie, David (2008). McKie's Gazetteer, A Local History of Britain. Atlantic Books. p. 19. ISBN 978-1-84354-654-2.Under Ashford, Kent.
^Stevenson, Robert Louis (1907) [originally written 1877]. "Crabbed Age and Youth". Crabbed Age and Youth and Other Essays. Portland, Maine: Thomas B. Mosher. pp. 11–12.
^Kirk, Russell (1968). Collected Articles on George Gissing: Who Knows George Gissing?. London: Frank Cass & Co. pp. 3–13.
^Winder, Robert (2004). Bloody Foreigners. London: Little, Brown. p. 264. ISBN 978-0-349-13880-0.
^"Jacobs, William", in Stanley J. Kunitz and Howard Haycraft, Twentieth Century Authors, A Biographical Dictionary of Modern Literature, (Third Edition). New York, The H. W. Wilson Company, 1950, pp. 721–723.
^Miller, David and Dinan, William (2008) A Century of Spin. Pluto Press. ISBN 978-0-7453-2688-7
^Thrane, James R. (1973). "Two New Stories by "Saki" (H. H. Munro)". Modern Fiction Studies. 19 (2): 139–144. JSTOR26279005.
^"The Durham Contest", The Times, 17 March 1939, p. 38
^Rothon, Robert (July 1, 2009). "Remembering Radclyffe Hall". Xtra Magazine. It made her famous - notorious, really - it made her a great deal of money, and terrific old Tory that she was, it made her an outcast when the great and the good turned against her and suppressed her novel in Great Britain.
^Eagleton, Terry (2005), The English Novel: An Introduction, Wiley-Blackwell, pp. 258–260.
^John Wakeman,
World Authors 1950–1970 : a companion volume to Twentieth Century Authors. New York : H. W. Wilson Company, 1975; ISBN 0-8242-0419-0 (pp. 444-48).
^John Wakeman, World Authors 1950–1970: A Companion Volume to Twentieth Century Authors. New York: H. W. Wilson Company, 1975, pp. 448–448 ISBN 0-8242-0419-0.
^Christina Schaeffner, ed. (2009). Political Discourse, Media and Translation. Cambridge Scholars Publishing. p. 35. ISBN 978-1-4438-1793-6. With regard to political affiliation The Daily Telegraph is a right-wing paper, The Times centre-right, The Financial Times centre-right and liberal, and The Guardian centre-left.
^[1]. "The Times", 11 December 2019. Retrieved 15 May 2023.