Helena Rosenblatt is professor of history at the Graduate Center, City University of New York. Her many books include Liberal Values: Benjamin Constant and the Politics of Religion and Thinking with Rousseau: From Machiavelli to Schmitt. She lives in New York City.
"One of Foreign Affairs' Picks for Best of Books 2018"
"One of Isthmus' Most Important Books of 2018 (Dave
Cieslewicz)"
"as the world picture darkens, [Rosenblatt's] dark picture
illuminates"---Adam Gopnik, New Yorker
"Enlightening."
*New York Times Book Review*
"The Lost History of Liberalism is a masterful work of intellectual
history."---Alexandre Lefebvre, Times Higher Education
"Lively and penetrating. . . . Rosenblatt shows that liberalism has
survived thanks to its appeal as a moral ideal, a vision of
political community that is based not just on interests but also on
values: respect, tolerance, and justice."---G. John Ikenberry,
Foreign Affairs
"In writing another beautifully balanced, intellectually vibrant
synthesis of thinkers and themes she knows incredibly well in a
very readable style, Rosenblatt offers a simple reminder that there
was nothing natural about the evolution of Anglo-American
liberalism into liberal democracy and that, because of this, it
certainly need not be our modern fate."---Duncan Kelly, Literary
Review
"Rosenblatt is impressive in the scope of her reading and at her
best in identifying different usages of the term liberal."---Peter
Clarke, Financial Times
"Rosenblatt has meticulously researched the word’s history,
unearthing forgotten meanings. She moves from liberalism’s roots in
19th century France and Germany to its growing association with the
United States in the 20th century. Gradually, an idea that began as
moralistic — and warned against the dangers of selfishness —
underwent a transformation. After World War II, conservatives
associated liberalism with the kind of grand social schemes they
believed led to totalitarianism. Liberals retreated to a position
that emphasized individual rights but not necessarily generosity
toward others. Rosenblatt invites a return to this broader,
Wisconsin-style view."---M.J. Andersen, Boston Globe
"[Rosenblatt] presents liberals as moralists and debunks the notion
of liberalism as so exclusively an Anglo-American
phenomenon."---Tyler Cowen, Marginal Revolution
"A dispassionate overview of the term and concepts of
liberalism—how it emerged, evolved, diversified, and alienated.
Rosenblatt (History/Graduate Center, CUNY) has published previous
works about liberalism (Liberal Values: Benjamin Constant and the
Politics of Religion, 2008, etc.), and she brings considerable
scholarly substance to this work, though most of it forms the
infrastructure for the accessible text. . . . There are some true
surprises here, too, perhaps most notably the initial liberal
opposition to women's rights and a fondness for eugenics in the
late 19th and early 20th centuries. The author also notes,
surprisingly, that factions within various liberal movements were
opposed to government help for the poor—a disincentive, they
claimed. Fair, balanced, and chockablock with information and
surprise."
*Kirkus*
"[A] wide-ranging and important book."---Warren Breckman, New
Republic
"Elegantly written. . . . These discussions are welcome additions
that help contemporary readers understand liberalism’s rich texture
and history. . . . As we search for ways to respond to the
challenges of the contemporary world, The Lost History of
Liberalism offers us a valuable resource."---Christine Dunn
Henderson, Los Angeles Review of Books
"This books challenges some of the assumptions held about
liberalism and reveals the historical foundations of why it may
well be, above all, an elusive tradition."---Alex Tebble, LSE
Review of Books
"An excellent recent survey of the term."---David A. Bell, The
Nation
"The Lost History of Liberalism is yet another impressive
performance from one of the leading intellectual historians and
deserving of a broad readership."---Max Skjönsberg, Nations and
Nationalism
"I’ve spent my last days utterly enraptured with a fantastic new
book that casts new light on a personal obsession: the history of
the word liberalism."---Jeffrey A Tucker, American Institute for
Economic Research’s Daily Economy
"An interesting and informative read, [The Lost History of
Liberalism] covers an impressive scope of material."---Alex Tebble,
Journal of Liberal History
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