The Bitter Product of Defeat? Reflections on Winstanley's Law of Freedom
Darren Webb
Political Studies, 2004, vol. 52, issue 2, 199-215
Abstract:
The Law of Freedom in a Platform was Gerrard Winstanley's final published work. It appeared in February 1652, nearly two years after the dissolution of the ‘Digger’ commune in Surrey of which he had been the principal spokesperson. The book is said to differ markedly from his previous writings. In particular, his depiction of a disciplinary state apparatus is contrasted to his earlier rejection of state authority, and his appeal to a utopian legislator (Cromwell) is contrasted to his earlier emphasis on the self‐emancipation of the poor. In accounting for this shift of position, commentators often refer to the ‘bitter’ experience of the Diggers’ defeat. Confronted everywhere by ignorance and persecution, Winstanley came to realise that institutionalised discipline was required to counter human imperfection and that emancipation could only come from the top down. This paper questions such an argument. It suggests that in almost every respect The Law of Freedom remained consistent with Winstanley's other writings and that no transformation in his thought took place. What apparent differences there were stemmed from the challenges presented by the utopian genre, and the paper concludes by arguing that Winstanley's achievement lies in his having risen to these challenges.
Date: 2004
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https://doi.org/10.1111/j.1467-9248.2004.00475.x
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