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E-grāmata: Historicising the French Revolution

  • Formāts: 345 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-May-2009
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781443811576
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  • Formāts: 345 pages
  • Izdošanas datums: 27-May-2009
  • Izdevniecība: Cambridge Scholars Publishing
  • ISBN-13: 9781443811576

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Three decades ago, Franēois Furet famously announced that the French Revolution was over. Napoleon's armies ceased to march around Europe long ago, and Louis XVIII even returned to occupy the throne of his guillotined brother. And yet the Revolution's memory continues to hold sway over imaginations and cultures around the world. This sway is felt particularly strongly by those who are interested in history: for the French Revolution not only altered the course of history radically, but became the fountainhead of historicism and the origin of the historical mentality. The sixteen essays collected in this volume investigate the Revolution's intellectual and material legacies. From popular culture to education and politics, from France and Ireland to Poland and Turkey, from 1789 to the present day, leading historians expose, alongside graduate students, the myriad ways in which the Revolution changed humanity's possible futures, its history, and the idea of history. They attest to how the Revolution has had a continuing global significance, and is still shaping the world today.

Recenzijas

'The essays in this absorbing volume are in large part the work of a young new generation of historians, and they show how thinking about the French Revolution has evolved over the two decades since the bicentenary of the French Revolution in 1989. The Revolution emerges as a continuing vital force shaping modern political culture, within France and without. The volume will be compulsory reading for all historians concerned with the origins of the modern era.' - Colin Jones, author, The Great Nation. France 1715-99.'This is an innovative and important collection of essays at the cutting-edge of recent scholarship on the French Revolution.' - Ruth Scurr, author, Fatal Purity: Robespierre and the French Revolution.'The French Revolution is not over, as Franēois Furet famously declared on its bicentenary, for its history is still a source of intense and wide-ranging debate. The innovatory studies published here, initially presented at a Cambridge conference, explore the meaning of the Revolution rather than its events. The authors, mostly young scholars from Europe and America, demonstrate that research into the subject remains both extremely lively and highly relevant.' - Malcolm Crook, editor, Revolutionary France 1780-1880'This is a substantial volume of essays, with some thought-provoking contributions being especially noteworthy as many of the authors are still (or were at the time of writing) completing their doctorates. [ ...] [ It will] certainly merit the attention of anyone interested in the continuing historical legacy of 1789.'- David Andress, University of Portsmouth, European History Quarterly, 41 (2).

Acknowledgements ix
Preface xi
Tim Blanning
Introduction xiii
Michael Sonenscher
Part I The Revolution in Historical Perspective: Changing Attitudes to the Past, Present and Future
Revolutionary Violence and the End of History: The Divided Self in Francophone Thought, 1762-1914
2(37)
Carolina Armenteros
The Refuse of the Revolution: Autograph Collecting in France, 1789-1860
39(25)
Tom Stammers
From Royal to Bourgeois: Augustin Thierry's National Narrative
64(15)
Matthew D'Auria
Making the Revolution History: Adolphe Thiers, 1823-73
79(17)
Robert Tombs
Historicising the French Revolution in the Third Republic: The Case of Ernest Lavisse
96(28)
Isabel DiVanna
Part II The Revolution and the Political Imagination
The Memory of the First Republic in Ledru-Rollin's Political Thought
124(22)
Thomas Chewning Jones
The French Revolution from a Turkish Perspective: Ahmet Agaoglu and High Individualism
146(22)
H. Ozan Ozavci
Memories of the Republique in Late Twentieth-Century France
168(21)
Emile Chabal
French Liberalism and the Legacy of the Revolution
189(17)
H.S. Jones
Part III Remembering the Revolution in Policy and Political Action
Rethinking the History of Ireland and the French Revolution
206(18)
Terrence Corrigan
The Educational Proposals of the French Revolution: A Case Study in the Intellectual and Cultural History of Expectations
224(21)
Adrian O'Connor
The Legacy of the French Revolution and the November Uprising in the Kingdom of Poland, 1815-31
245(21)
Przemyslaw Milewicz
Remembering the Napoleonic Period in the French-Occupied Rhineland, 1918-30
266(18)
Tom Williams
Part IV The Revolution in Historiographical Debate
Ex-Conventionnels versus Historians of the French Revolution
284(24)
Mette Harder
The Continuing Historiographical Debate on the Cult and Festival of the Supreme Being
308(16)
Jonathan Smyth
Des historiens contre la Revolution francaise au XXe siecle
324(11)
Christian Amalvi
Epilogue 335(4)
Carolina Armenteros
Contributors' Biographies 339
Carolina Armenteros is a British Academy Postdoctoral Research Fellow at the University of Cambridge and a fellow of Wolfson College. She specialises in European social and political thought ca. 1748-1914, with a special emphasis on France. Dawn Dodds; Coming from a multi-disciplinary background of History, Political Science, and Philosophy, Dawn Dodds's graduate-level research has focused on themes of political violence, dissent, legitimacy and the institutionalization of authority. Isabel DiVanna is a Junior Research Fellow at Wolfson College, Cambridge. Her graduate level research has focused on philosophy of history and methodology of historical and literary studies in late nineteenth-century France. Tim Blanning is Professor of Modern European History at the University of Cambridge and a Fellow of Sidney Sussex College. He has published extensively on the political and cultural history of Europe in the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries and is also general editor of The Oxford History of Europe and The Short Oxford History of Europe.