Book contents
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgements
- H. T. Dickinson: An Appreciation
- Introduction
- Part I Parliament and Political Cultures
- Part II Beyond Liberty and Property
- 6 Edmund Burke, Dissent and Church and State
- 7 ‘The Wisest and Most Beneficial Schemes’: William Ogilvie, Radical Political Economy and the Scottish Enlightenment
- 8 Thomas Spence and James Harrington: A Case Study in Influence
- 9 Thomas Spence, Children's Literature and ‘Learning … Debauched by Ambition’
- Part III The Long and Wide 1790s
- Selected List of H. T. Dickinson's Publications, 1964–2015
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
8 - Thomas Spence and James Harrington: A Case Study in Influence
from Part II - Beyond Liberty and Property
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 05 September 2016
- Frontmatter
- Contents
- List of Figures and Tables
- Acknowledgements
- H. T. Dickinson: An Appreciation
- Introduction
- Part I Parliament and Political Cultures
- Part II Beyond Liberty and Property
- 6 Edmund Burke, Dissent and Church and State
- 7 ‘The Wisest and Most Beneficial Schemes’: William Ogilvie, Radical Political Economy and the Scottish Enlightenment
- 8 Thomas Spence and James Harrington: A Case Study in Influence
- 9 Thomas Spence, Children's Literature and ‘Learning … Debauched by Ambition’
- Part III The Long and Wide 1790s
- Selected List of H. T. Dickinson's Publications, 1964–2015
- Notes on the Contributors
- Index
Summary
This essay will attempt to identify the extent to which the political thought of Thomas Spence (1750–1814) was influenced by the works of James Harrington (1611–77). In his introduction to The Political Works of Thomas Spence, Harry Dickinson noted that Spence ‘was much influenced not only by the Bible, but by the idealised societies of Thomas More's Utopia and James Harrington's Oceana’, and ‘accepted James Harrington's thesis that political power was derived from the possession of property, especially landed property’. Other scholars have also identified the influence of Harrington, although they have been divided over its extent. Malcolm Chase argued that ‘much of the distinctiveness of Spence's thought was derived … from … James Harrington’, most particularly in his ‘concern to isolate property in land as the key to political power’. Chase, in addition, noted that both Spence and Harrington also:
confidently shared a belief that landed property was capable of a meaningful and enduring redistribution. Likewise, they were dismissive of the claims of mobile property to form the basis of political citizenship or national fortune or stability. The terms in which this belief was expressed by Spence suggest a close acquaintance with Harrington's work.
As further evidence of this ‘special affinity’, Chase highlighted the similarity between the names of the ‘allegorical societies’ that the two authors imagined (Oceana and Crusonia/Spensonia), noted that Spence read from Harrington's work at his trial in 1801, and reminded the reader that in Pig's Meat – Spence's weekly journal that ran from 1793 to 1795 and consisted largely of extracts from other writers – the writer most often quoted was Harrington. Earlier work had drawn similar connections, and G. I. Gallop stated that ‘James Harrington was a major influence on Spence’, while Olive Rudkin identified ‘one writer who had a real influence upon Spence, and he is James Harrington’. Thomas R. Knox, however, was more cautious and, while he conceded that Harrington is the only writer towards whom Spence might possibly display a ‘hint of a significant debt’, he argued that in general Spence used a somewhat limited knowledge of English political theorists ‘to legitimate, not to inspire’ his own ideas.
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- Information
- Liberty, Property and Popular PoliticsEngland and Scotland, 1688-1815. Essays in Honour of H. T. Dickinson, pp. 118 - 130Publisher: Edinburgh University PressPrint publication year: 2015