Strong Language: Mathew Carey, Sensibility, and the American State, 1819–1835
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Published:2021-04
Issue:2
Volume:33
Page:113-142
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ISSN:0898-0306
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Container-title:Journal of Policy History
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language:en
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Short-container-title:J. Policy Hist.
Author:
VANDECREEK DREW E.
Abstract
AbstractMathew Carey promoted the high tariff as a political expression of humane sentiments that relieved American workers of the misery caused by low wages and unemployment. This made him an early example of a state-builder working outside the state itself, building ideological frames and using emotional appeals to promote the expansion of state capacity. Although other aspects of his protectionism appealed to the republican tradition, Carey meshed his sentimental appeal with the liberalism. Later reformers integrated sensibility with liberalism by reference to the rights of vulnerable parties, but Carey added an appeal to an enlightened self-interest that allowed American manufacturers to profit while protecting workers. Although he became a well-known advocate for the organized provision of social welfare, his continued opposition to the widespread distribution of outdoor relief also suggests that he viewed the policy as a circumscribed federal social-welfare measure providing work rather than direct aid.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Subject
Public Administration,Sociology and Political Science
Reference76 articles.
1. Afterword: Why Should We Listen to Mathew Carey?
2. Virtue Besieged,” 542. Martin Ohman discusses Carey’s use of statistics in greater detail in “The Statistical Turn in Early American Political Economy;Huston;Early American Studies,2013