David Bromwich is Sterling Professor of English at Yale University.
The Burke David Bromwich presents in his new book The Intellectual
Life of Edmund Burke is certainly a formidable figure, but one who
resists recruitment for twenty-first-century causes. It is his
elusiveness that makes him a live presence; he was a traditionalist
and a progressive, an enlightened critic of Enlightenment run amok,
a secular thinker who insisted on the indispensability of religious
faith. He thought it pointless to insist on rights whose
enforcement would bring disaster, as when British governments
asserted their right to tax the colonies and brought on a
revolutionary war; and yet he had no doubt about the reality of
rights. Burke was an eighteenth-century Whig, not a
twenty-first-century liberal or conservative, but both of the
latter can engage with him with advantage. David Bromwich has been
thinking about him for more than a quarter of a century, and by now
has an unrivaled sensitivity to the workings of his mind; like
Burke, Bromwich is a formidable critic, ranging over politics,
literature, higher education, and much else, and on every page of
Edmund Burke, one can feel him responding to Burke across the whole
range of Burke’s interests as if he was in the room with him…
[Bromwich’s] focus on the first three decades of Burke’s life as a
thinker, writer, and political actor yields riches… We shall have
to wait for the second volume of this engrossing account to see how
David Bromwich handles the Burke who responded so differently to
the second great revolution of the late eighteenth century. His
penetrating first volume makes us impatient to see what he will
say.
*New York Review of Books*
[Bromwich] gives us a figure who may be unknown to readers familiar
with Burke only from ‘Reflections on the Revolution in France’ or
his reputation as modern conservatism’s founding father. Bromwich’s
Burke is one for whom ‘ordinary feelings such as trust, though they
have a Christian correlative, themselves supply a sufficient
groundwork of moral conduct.’ Burke is moved more by a universal
sympathy for human struggle than by religion or patriotism… Though
his attention throughout is on Burke’s moral psychology, Bromwich
also highlights the literary character of his thought, including
his debts to Milton and Shakespeare… In Burke’s politics there was
room alike for elite rule and street demonstrations of the Tea
Party or Occupy Wall Street variety. This balance of familiar and
strange, Burke’s enlightened humanity and his intricate
understanding of power, make him well deserving of the extensive
treatment he has lately received—and especially of the justice
David Bromwich has rendered him in showing Edmund Burke in the most
unexpected of lights.
*New York Times Book Review*
It is David Bromwich’s aim in The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke
that people should know a good deal more about what Burke actually
said and wrote… Bromwich’s patient and subtle exposition is a
continuing delight. After reading this first volume, several major
misreadings of Burke and a more general ignorance of his arguments
and actions will not be possible, or at any rate won’t be
legitimate… The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke is both
indispensable and unputdownable, and with its companion volume will
surely form a lasting landmark.
*London Review of Books*
In The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke: From the Sublime and
Beautiful to American Independence, a searching and profoundly
meditated account of the earlier part of Burke’s career, David
Bromwich is not much interested in finding a [political] label: he
does something much more valuable, which is to evoke with
tremendous accomplishment the complexities of Burke that are always
bound to resist any such attempt… The concluding volume of his
outstanding intellectual Life of his subject will be eagerly
awaited by many.
*Times Literary Supplement*
[A] recent biographer of Burke calls him the father of
conservatism. So a reappraisal of his early works is welcome. David
Bromwich, a professor at Yale University, has written a history of
Burke’s thought until American independence; a more liberal Burke
emerges from this book… Burke continued to fight for liberty later
on in life. He backed Americans in their campaign for freedom from
British taxation. He supported Catholic freedoms and freer trade
with Ireland, in spite of his constituents’ ire. He wanted more
liberal laws on the punishment of debtors. He even pushed to curb
the slave trade in 1780, a quarter of a century before it was
abolished.
*The Economist*
Magnificent, beautifully written…[and] the most notable addition to
a recent crop of books about Burke… [This] is an intellectual
biography of the best kind. Bromwich seeks to convey ‘what it meant
to think like Edmund Burke’ and to demonstrate the coherence and
relevance of Burke’s moral and political vision. With a remarkable
level of detail and sensitivity, Bromwich makes a virtue out of
what others lament as problematic: the relationship between Burke’s
political activity and his written works. Bromwich is convinced
that people today can still learn from Burke, not as political
partisans but as ‘thoughtful readers.’ In Bromwich’s hands, Burke
offers better lessons about how to think than about what to think…
It offers a revealing portrait of Burke’s mind.
*Foreign Affairs*
Brilliant… Bromwich’s intellectual acuity provides key insights
into how aesthetics and politics fused [in Burke]… Bromwich’s first
volume brings the reader up to the eve of Burke’s speech on Fox’s
India Bill (1783), and we will have to wait for volume two to deal
with the impeachment of Warren Hastings, Burke’s recoil from the
momentous events of the French Revolution, and his near despair at
impending crisis in Ireland. On this showing that volume will be
eagerly awaited.
*Irish Times*
In The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke, David Bromwich sets aside
the conventional views of Burke—the eloquent opponent of radical
ideology—to track the formation of his outlook and explore his
early career… The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke most of all
reminds us that Burke’s understanding of the moral psychology
guiding politics sprang from his engagement with both ideas and
practical questions. Certainly a better grasp of Burke’s early
thought and the political turmoil of his time will prepare us for a
fuller understanding of his response to the dramatic events of the
late 18th century—not least, the outbreak of the revolution in
France and the implications Burke saw for England and for liberty
itself.
*Wall Street Journal*
All good biographies are called magisterial, but David Bromwich’s
The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke: From the Sublime and
Beautiful to American Independence actually merits the adjective.
Edmund Burke was a rare figure: a working politician who was also
one of the great thinkers of his, or any, time… Bromwich’s book,
the first in a two-part biography, does justice to both the
politics and the thought, showing how Burke’s principles—a hatred
of violence and a love of liberty—emerged from political and
historical circumstances. Meticulous in its research and elegant in
style, The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke is a masterpiece of
intellectual history.
*Christian Science Monitor*
Magisterial… It is the best in-depth, comprehensive recent analysis
of Burke’s thought—plus it is an enjoyable read… Bromwich’s work
reveals a Burke who is politically principled and (more or less)
philosophically consistent, but who does not conform conveniently
to our present-day conceptions of right or left.
*Chronicle of Higher Education*
Magnificent… Bromwich masters and then mines [the copious private
correspondence] with a degree of skill and discrimination I haven’t
seen in a Burkean study since the late 1970s… The sheer, marvelous
plenitude of the material Bromwich brings into his narrative
quickly broadens the story to take in the full ambit of Burke’s
public intellectualism… Bromwich thoroughly understands how clearly
the man is revealed in his writing, and one of the greatest
pleasures in The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke is the
regularity with which we get chunks of Burke’s own intensely good
prose. The man was a tireless student of human nature and one of
the sharpest observers of man the political animal since Tacitus.
And his descriptions of political creatures are uniformly so
perceptive that any 21st century [reader] will find them instantly
recognizable… Bromwich might not be doing the standard
finances-and-family run-through of a biography, but he nevertheless
ends up painting as vivid a personal portrait as any
biography-reader could want… [An] irreplaceable study, which
inadvertently underscores the disquieting extent to which we are
all living in a political continuum of Burke’s shaping. When this
volume is completed by its sequel, we’ll have a benchmark of Burke
studies fit to last a century.
*Open Letters Monthly*
Probing and subtle… Helps us glimpse the sources of Burke’s
surprising longevity… Bromwich’s Burke is not the evasive
pragmatist who has been conscripted as the founding father of
conservatism… Bromwich’s biography promises to be the fullest and
most responsibly sensitive account of both Burke’s consistency and
his ductility that we will ever have.
*Standpoint*
Bromwich restores to view the complexity of Burke’s thinking about
politics in the decades culminating with the American war… Cascades
with insights into Burke’s antipathy toward the conflict with
America, his limited sympathy for reform but tolerance for popular
resistance, and his neglected engagement in such issues as
protesting the slave trade… Identifying Burke’s ‘politics’ with the
totality of his public and private writings, Bromwich displays a
formidable grasp of Burke’s public ‘performances,’ his
correspondence, as well as myriad scattered writings and speeches…
Among its considerable merits, The Intellectual Life of Edmund
Burke does not lapse into the potted generalizations of some
intellectual history, nor appeals to Burke as bedrock Tory (or for
that matter, radical Irishman)… The Intellectual Life of Edmund
Burke instead constitutes a steely polemic for the possibility of
sustained thought amidst heated controversy and the minutiae of
events, posing searching questions about the role of intellectual
life in shaping political action.
*Eighteenth-Century Studies*
Drawing on Burke’s correspondence, as well as his public writings
and speeches, Bromwich presents the portrait of a serious thinker
who cannot be easily categorized as either conservative or
liberal—Burke spoke out about abuse of power, even supporting the
American colonies, yet at times seemed to distrust democracy…
Bromwich has brought his considerable research and writing skills
together to present a readable, thorough picture of Burke’s earlier
years.
*Library Journal*
Edmund Burke was famed for weaving into arguments like a serpent;
David Bromwich displays equal finesse, skill, and relentlessness in
moving through the complexities and sheer volume of Burke’s
writings. The drive, fluency, and intelligence of Bromwich’s
analysis allow the reader to see Burke as that rare animal, a prime
thinker who was also a practicing politician, a man caught up in a
time when both varieties of democracy and new forms of empire were
violently and contentiously on the rise.
*Linda Colley, author of The Ordeal of Elizabeth Marsh: A Woman
in World History*
The Intellectual Life of Edmund Burke shows, in a very enlightening
way, how Burke returns over and over to the theme of the relations
between a politician and ‘the people’ and the gradual hardening of
his insistence that while popular views must be taken account of,
they must not determine how a conscientious politician acts.
Bromwich reads Burke with care and depth and displays a range of
learning and insights. His approach to Burke as a moralist in
public life is original.
*Peter Marshall, editor of The Writings and Speeches of Edmund
Burke, Volumes V–VII*
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