Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY
/
Birth of the Modern
Birth of the Modern
Jul 1, 2025 1:46 AM

Johnson presents a daunting tome of some one thousand pages filled with an interdisciplinary approach that views history as a whole, involving the interface between painters (Turner), musicians (Beethoven), scientists (Lyell), and ordinary people. This emphasis upon social history, avoiding the tendency of past historians to overemphasize political events, mon among contemporary historians. But, unlike many, Johnson does not bore the reader with mundane facts about plumbing contracts in nineteenth-century France, nor does he have a hidden socialist agenda to cut down to size the historical importance of great political and business leaders. As one e to expect from Johnson, his prose is lively and his anecdotes are often amusing, yet always substantial. A case in point is his colorful portrayal of the richness of the intellectual life of Edinburgh in the early 1830s. According to Johnson, Edinburgh was a prime example of “a Renaissance sense of universalism” in which scientists and artists talked to one another and learned from one another, in sad contrast to the present day. Johnson succeeds in allowing the “distinct voices” of the age to be heard, from Andrew Jackson to George Sand.

Vivid pictures of social life, of both the small and the great, are found in abundance. One example is the curious difference of opinion between the British and the Americans on the propriety of shaking hands (the British reserving such a greeting for close relations). Johnson’s portrayal of the events surrounding the crucial Congress of Vienna, where the shape of Europe after Napoleon was decided, is a lively portrait of people praying, hunting, gambling, and even discovering the waltz, all in the midst of participation in the Congress’s momentous political decisions, which kept the peace, more or less, in Europe for almost one hundred years. We are reminded that political events do not occur in a vacuum, unrelated to real lives.

But, at the heart of the Birth of the Modern, is the idea of liberty.While Johnson unfortunately does not explicitly say it, the data he presents demands this conclusion. And, through the author’s interdisciplinary approach, it is obvious that liberty intoxicated the whole of society and culture in the early 1800s. As Johnson claims, “The early 19th century was a great age of science precisely because it was a great age of poetry.” This is a strong statement. But it makes sense because of the freedom of the imagination that both scientist and poet began to experience in that age. Because scientists such as Lyell and Davy did e out of the universities, where a guild mentality admitted only certain ideas (cf. the contemporary American “politically correct” university), science was able to blossom in the nineteenth century. Certainly this flourishing was true socially and economically with Great Britain, where the Industrial Revolution developed because the British government left the entrepreneur free to pursue his goals.

Nevertheless, there was a dark side to the advent of the modern world–a risk of freedom, it seems to me. Hence, slavery progressed as a consequence of industrialization addressed not as a problem to be practically remedied but as a great ideological chasm that divided a nation more and more and could only be resolved, tragically, by a civil war. So Johnson argues. The parallel to the contemporary abortion controversy is chilling.

With the creation of new wealth, ironically, the “luxury” to consider the question of the poor came about. “For the first time in history, resignation before the suffering and degradation inherent in the human condition was no longer necessary.” Before the advent of capitalism, poverty was inevitable if you were born into that class. But, sadly, the developing Western consciences would often blame the free market as the cause of poverty rather than turn to it for a measure of relief and hope.

The manifold examples of societal structures that reflected this new burst of freedom are striking: From the organs of public opinion, to the rise of modern banking and credit, liberty was creating a better life. It was also being constantly threatened by a reaction, whether in the form of the Chinese scholar-totalitarians, or by the German philosopher Fichte’s ideas of power and nationalism, or by the contract breaking of the growing labor movement–all obviously portents of things e.

Johnson shows that during this period, the artist as genius (Beethoven, Byron, Shelley) became a virtual new religion. This certainly was another consequence of liberty, the freedom to create, but the debauched lives of Byron and Shelley reveal that liberty is a precious responsibility. At this point, Johnson’s inadequate attention to religion is unfortunate. Certainly a discussion of the advent of frontier evangelicalism in early nineteenth- century America with its dynamic optimism and individualism is worthy of attention in such a work as the author’s. And why were nineteenth-century heroes such as Byron and Shelley viewed as such when their ideas were antithetical to religion?

In addition to the absence of religion, the work suffers from a lack of analysis. Does the artistic and economic imagination lead inevitably to atheism, on the one hand, and the worship of lucre, on the other? Many of our contemporaries would lead us to believe yes. Such a discussion is not to be found in Johnson. The reader is appreciative for the incredible amount of facts contained within but thirsts for analysis, for wrestling with questions of “why?” Johnson provided a stimulating and provocative analysis in a much smaller, earlier book, Intellectuals. Why he did not do so in such a larger volume is puzzling.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY
Prophecy and Realpolitik in the Holy Land
  David Friedman was Donald Trump’s tax attorney before the former president made him Ambassador to Israel in 2017. The Senate confirmed his appointment by a whisker-thin majority, over the vociferous opposition of the foreign policy establishment and the liberal Jewish world. What seemed like a crony appointment at the time turned out to be a stroke of genius.   Friedman played...
Overcome Evil with Good This Halloween
  “Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.” Romans 12:21 (NIV)   As October unfolds, we find ourselves surrounded by the sights and sounds of Halloween. From spooky decorations to entertainment with horror themes, Halloween is a season when we can become more aware of the reality of evil in our fallen world. Evil can seem overwhelming –...
A Prayer for What to Do When Someone You Love Dies
  A Prayer for What to Do When Someone You Love Dies   By Chris Eyte   Bible Reading   yet we are confident and satisfied to be out of the body and at home with the Lord. - 2 Cor. 5:8   Listen or Read Below:   So I agreed to write this devotional on what to do when someone you love dies - and...
Teaching Eloquence
  As Election Day approaches, I’ve been listening, though as little as possible, to our candidates for public office giving their standard speeches on their standard issues. These, frankly, are boring. The crowds may respond with (apparently) spontaneous enthusiasm and even excitement, but the words being spoken are more or less boilerplate, what the French call langue de bois, or xyloglossie,...
Against the Passion for Modernisation
  The Left in Anglospheric countries has long been influenced by the belief that these nations political practices and institutions are stuck in the past. While much of the world, driven by ideologies such as Marxism, nationalism, and liberal rationalism, has discarded practices and institutions deemed remnants of a bygone era in the belief that such actions are necessary to bring...
What Does Walk by the Spirit Really Mean?
  What does “walk by the Spirit” really mean?   So I say, walk by the Spirit, and you will not gratify the desires of the flesh. - Galatians 5:16   In 1933, bowler Bill Knox had a large screen placed just above the bowling lane so that he couldn’t see the pins. All he could see was a few feet in front...
Was the Founding Generation Churched?
  George Hawley is one of the best students of contemporary political conservativism and the Alt-Right. His recent Law Liberty piece on American Christian nationalism does not disappoint. He and I are in full agreement that “the notion that the United States is on the precipice of a fundamentalist theocracy”—as so many critics of Christian nationalism assert—is, in his word, “risible.”...
Seeing God as Our Father
  Weekly Overview:   This life is marked by a single choice: who or what will we center our lives around? This choice takes each of us down a path of decisions that shape who we are, what we feel, who or what we value, and what we will have accomplished at the end of our days. To center our lives around...
The Disenchanted Charles Taylor
  In the Poetics, Aristotle argues that we are by nature imitators. Poetry, as atype of imitation,gives pleasure because by it, says Aristotle, we “come to understand and work out what each thing is.” Charles Taylor—one of the preeminent living philosophers—does not think Aristotle’s poetics viable in modernity, an age of self-creation.   The 92-year-old Canadian is a specialist in hefty books. His latest...
Disney and Creative Misdirection
  As the old saying goes, “politics is downstream of culture.” Unfortunately, this tends to be forgotten in election years, when this observation is even more applicable. If conservatives want to understand why progressives think and vote the way they do, they need only look at their media which influences them in profound ways.   Accordingly, it might be a good idea...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2025 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved