Draconianism

See also: draconianism

English

Etymology

From Draconian +‎ -ism.

Noun

Draconianism (usually uncountable, plural Draconianisms)

  1. Alternative letter-case form of draconianism.
    • 1819, William Gifford, letter to John Murray; quoted in Samuel Smiles, A Publisher and His Friends: Memoir and Correspondence of the Late John Murray, [], volume I, London: John Murray, []; New York, N.Y.: Charles Scribner’s Sons, [], 1891, →OCLC, page 404:
      What a store of shame and sorrow is he laying up for himself! I never much admired the vaunt of Draconianism, ‘And all this I dare do, because I dare,’ yet what but this is Lord Byron’s plea!
    • 1939 October, “Germany I: ‘We Are Living in a Fortress’”, in Fortune, volume XX, number 4, New York, N.Y.: Time Inc., →ISSN, →OCLC, page 126, column 2:
      This latter development is one of the most interesting of all Nazi Draconianisms. Under the Hereditary Farms Law of 1933, all farms up to 312 acres that are capable of supporting a family can never be mortgaged or sold and must be passed on undivided by the owner after his death to the eldest (in some cases the youngest) male heir.
    • 2008 July, Graeme Anderson, “All at Sea and a Dose of the Blues”, in In Keane We Trust: The Story of a Footballing City’s Faith in One Man: A Record of Sunderland’s 2007-08 Season, Ireland: Sports-i, →ISBN, page 217:
      Keane could hardly have laid it on the line more eloquently in his press conference that week, that this was discipline rather than Draconianism. There wasn’t a trace of self-doubt from the manager over the action he’d taken.
    • 2012 April 17, Edward N. Haas, “On Secret Sins”, in What Happens in Death + a Few Related Topics, Bloomington, Ind.: AuthorHouse, →ISBN, footnote 1, page 129:
      But, having seen what monumentally disastrous consequences the Draconianism of their papal predecessors caused, no pope since then could possibly be excusably ignorant of how evil such Draconianism is as a result of the consequences it is all too likely to precipitate regardless of whether or not it is a punishment not exceeding the crime.
    • 2016, Ed Spencer, “Joined-up thought”, in The People’s Republic of Absurdia or Blighty: The State We’re In, London; Suffield, Norfolk: Sigmund Fraud Books, →ISBN, page 216:
      The endpoint of Draconianism may not necessarily have been the destination when Hair set sail but my, he got us there in the end, didn’t he? And though I warned of it, I never really thought that what I wrote would become vital in the vain hope of upholding civil liberty.