Jingoism

views updated May 29 2018

Jingoism

BIBLIOGRAPHY

The term jingoism dates from the late 1870s. The jingoes, so termed after a music-hall song, were vociferous supporters of a strong British foreign policy in the Near East. Jingoism subsequently came to define any foreign policy in support of national interests that took its cue from public opinion. For social scientists, jingoism stands as one of the manifestations of nationalism in the Western world in the half-century leading up to World War I (19141918).

In the spring of 1877, Russia went to war with Turkey. The Conservative British government, led by Benjamin Disraeli (18041881), was concerned that Constantinople might fall to the Russians and that this would endanger the security of British routes to its Indian empire. Neutrality was declared, but conditional on the safeguarding of British interests. Toward the end of the year, it seemed as if these interests might be threatened, and the possibility loomed that Britain would become involved in a reprise of the Crimean War of the 1850s. A strong peace campaign urged the government not to get involved in the war, and for some weeks it seemed to carry all before it. But then, in January 1878, the peace meetings began to be broken up by supporters of a strong policy. The changing mood of the public was evident also in popular entertainment. G. W. Hunt (c. 18301904) wrote and composed a song to reflect and express the views of those who wanted the government to stand firm in the face of the Russian advance. It played on a deep-rooted Russophobia in Britain, one verse going:

The Dogs of War are loose, and the rugged
   Russian Bear,
Full bent on blood and robbery, has crawled
    out of his lair,
It seems a thrashing now and then will never
     help to tame 
That brute, and so hes bent upon the same old
    game.

Sung by G. H. Macdermott (c. 18451901) in London, and then on a provincial tour, the song became a popular hit, its rousing chorus giving the jingoes their name:

We dont want to fight,
But by Jingo if we do
Weve got the ships, we
    got the men, weve got the money too.
We wont let the Russians get to
   Constantinople.

Thoroughly alarmed at the changing mood of the public, and at the violent breakup of their meetings, the advocates of peace described their opponents as jingoes, the new tribe of music-hall patriots who sing the jingo song.

From that moment on, through the late nineteenth and early twentieth centuries, jingoism was a term used by opponents of an assertive foreign policy. Moderate Conservatives as well as Liberals and socialists were alarmed at what they saw as the undue influence on policymaking of raucous public opinion. It was not that there had not previously been virulent antiforeign sentiment, against the Spanish in the early modern period, and against the French in the eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. A fear of Russia itself had deep roots. What was new, and what distinguished jingoism from these earlier manifestations, was that it coincided in time with Britain becoming increasingly democratic. Most urban working-class men had become entitled to vote in 1867, and this was extended to those living in rural areas in 1884. The worry of the elite classes, whatever their politics, was that an undereducated electorate, swayed by a cheap popular press and music-hall songs, would exercise an undue influence on the conduct of foreign policy.

Lord Derby (18261893), who had been Disraelis foreign secretary in 1878 but lost his job when Disraeli gave way to the jingoes, complained in 1882 that the leading idea of jingoism seemed to be that no State can be in a healthy condition that is not occasionally pitching into its neighbour. Lord Salisbury (18301903), Conservative prime minister for much of the late nineteenth century, argued in 1897 that an arbitration system would be an invaluable bulwark to defend the Minister from the jingoes. The most extended attack on jingoism came from the Liberal publicist J. A. Hobson (18581940), whose The Psychology of Jingoism (1901) was prompted by the renewed breakup of peace meetings during the South African War of 1899 to 1902. Hobson explained jingoism by linking together the fashionable psychology that was alarmed by the herd instinct of the populations of the large cities of the modern world and the growth of the popular press, which seemed to pander to the worst instincts of these urban masses.

Detailed research on those who might be called active jingoesthose who tried to break up peace meetingssuggests that they were often associated with other right-wing populist causes such as fair trade (to keep out foreign imports) and opposition to immigration. Medical students, hardly typical of an undereducated urban mass, featured prominently in the rowdy meetings. Many jingoes had links with the Conservative Party. Although the party leaders were often distinctly lukewarm about jingoism, there is much evidence that, as in the 1900 general election where the South African war was the dominant issue, Conservatives gained by their association with an assertive foreign policy. More generally, a nationalistic foreign policy appealed to the growing lower middle class of clerks and shopkeepers who may have been trying to overcome their anxiety about their status by affirming loyalty to the nation.

Jingoism as a word crossed the Atlantic, its use particularly prevalent in the 1890s. In 1896 the Nation in New York referred to Jingoish ideas of Americas past and future, and in 1898 President William McKinley (18431901) was reported to have said that he will not be jingoed into war. But whether or not the word jingo was used, all Western countries were familiar with the phenomenon prior to World War I. In France, chauvinism was the equivalent of jingoism.

The experience of World War I put an end to the more overt assertions of national aggression. There were people who continued to hold views similar to the jingoes, but they were more on the fringe. The right-wing nationalism of the 1920s and 1930s came in the even more alarming form of fascism. After World War II (19391945), critics of British foreign policy or public opinion sometimes blamed jingoism, for example, for the war over the Falkland Islands in the 1980s. But as a permanent presence on the political scene, jingoism had a lifespan of some forty years preceding World War I.

SEE ALSO Boer War; Conservative Party (Britain); Elites; Ethnocentrism; Foreign Policy; Herd Behavior; Imperialism; Militarism; Nationalism and Nationality; Nativism; Patriotism; Right Wing; World War I; World War II

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Cunningham, Hugh. 1971. Jingoism in 18771878. Victorian Studies 14 (4): 429453.

Porter, Bernard. 2004. The Absent-Minded Imperialists: Empire, Society, and Culture in Britain. Oxford: Oxford University Press.

Price, Richard N. 1977. Society, Status, and Jingoism: The Social Roots of Lower Middle Class Patriotism, 18701900. In The Lower Middle Class in Britain, 18701914, ed. Geoffrey Crossick, 89112. London: Croom Helm.

Readman, Paul. 2001. The Conservative Party, Patriotism, and British Politics: The Case of the General Election of 1900. Journal of British Studies 40 (1): 107145.

Hugh Cunningham

Jingoism

views updated May 29 2018

JINGOISM

The word jingoism, signifying the assertive expression of nationalist feelings, comes from a London music hall song of 1877. The occasion was the Russo-Turkish War that had broken out in April and which, if the Russians were victorious, seemed to threaten British interests in the region. The song's chorus went: "We don't want to fight, / But by Jingo if we do / We've got the ships, we've got the men, we've got the money too. / We won't let the Russians get to Constantinople." In late 1877 and early 1878, there was a strong movement with many public meetings in Britain against involvement in the war, but at the end of January these meetings began to be broken up by supporters of a more assertive policy. The peace party was thoroughly alarmed at the violence and the apparent turn of public opinion, and one of them, aware of the popularity of the song, labeled their opponents "Jingoes." The term took hold, and soon extended to jingoism to describe the kind of policy associated with the Conservative government under Benjamin Disraeli (1804–1881), first on the Eastern Question, and then in its involvement in Afghanistan and South Africa.

Although some so-called Jingoes were happy to accept the label, the term throughout the period up to 1914 was mainly used by their opponents who, in an age of widening democracy, were alarmed at the attraction of so many potential voters to what seemed to them to be irrational and dangerous policies. In The Psychology of Jingoism (1901), published in the midst of the South African, or Boer, War (1899–1902) when peace meetings were again broken up, the Liberal publicist J. A. Hobson explained jingoism as a coming together of the survival of brutality and credulity from "savage nature" and certain conditions of modern civilization, especially the power of the media and the rootlessness of town life.

It is difficult to be certain of the appeal of jingoism, particularly as it carried no obviously definable meaning. Over time jingoism ceased to be associated exclusively with those who broke up public meetings and came to signify anyone who supported a patriotic policy. Within Britain, jingoism was particularly associated with London, though it was by no means confined to it. Contemporary critics argued that Jingoes were to be found in all classes, but gave special prominence to the presence in Jingo crowds of medical students, members of the stock exchange, and workers spilling out of pubs and music halls. Modern historians have argued that jingoism's appeal was primarily to the lower middle classes, particularly clerks, who overcame status anxieties by affirming their loyalty to nation.

Jingoism needs to be seen as the British expression of an assertive nationalism to be found all over Europe. In France, similar types of action and thought were known as chauvinism. Although by 1914 militarism had partially replaced jingoism as the word peace-loving liberals and socialists were most likely to use to describe their opponents, it was still useful in stirring up fears of the threat posed by right-wing nationalism to the prospects for both peace and democracy.

See alsoBoer War; Disraeli, Benjamin; Eastern Question; Nationalism; Russo-Turkish War.

bibliography

Cunningham, Hugh. "Jingoism in 1877–78." Victorian Studies 14 (1971): 429–453.

Price, Richard. An Imperial War and the British Working Class: Attitudes and Reactions to the Boer War, 1899–1902. London, 1972.

Taylor, Miles. "Patriotism, History, and the Left in Twentieth-Century Britain." Historical Journal 33 (1990): 971–987.

Ward, Paul. Red Flag and Union Jack: Englishness, Patriotism and the British Left, 1881–1924. Woodbridge, U.K., 1998.

Hugh Cunningham

Jingoism

views updated May 23 2018

JINGOISM

JINGOISM, in American usage, a term for the blatant demand for an aggressive foreign policy. The word is probably derived from a music-hall song popularized in England during a crisis with Russia in 1877–1878:

We don't want to fight, but, by jingo, if we do,
We've got the ships, we've got the men and got the money too.

By March 1878 "jingo" was a term of political reproach. In the United States it has been directed toward those who have advocated the annexation of Canada, the seizure of Mexico, expansion in the Caribbean or the Pacific, or a bellicose interpretation of the Monroe Doctrine.

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Beisner, Robert L. From the Old Diplomacy to the New, 1865–1900. New York: Crowell, 1975; Arlington Heights, Ill.: Harlan Davidson, 1986.

Stanley R.Pillsbury/d. b.

See alsoForeign Policy ; Monroe Doctrine .

jingoism

views updated May 29 2018

jingoism. The word comes from a music-hall song popular at the time of the 1876–8 Eastern crisis: ‘We don't want to fight, but by jingo if we do …’. Later it was used to describe other manifestations of popular bellicosity during foreign wars. The most famous example was on Mafeking night, 18 May 1900, when crowds took to the streets to celebrate the relief of a British garrison during the second Boer War, although there is controversy over how widespread the feeling was. It also erupted later, notably during the Falklands War of 1982, stoked up—as it generally is—by the gutter press.

Bernard Porter