886 results on '"FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799"'
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2. William Wordsworth, Child of Nature, Child of the Century: The Crisis of The Prelude in European Context.
- Author
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Johnston, Kenneth R.
- Subjects
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EUROPEAN literature , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *NINETEENTH century , *COINCIDENCE , *SYMPHONY - Abstract
When he first heard in May of 1804 that Bonaparte intended to declare himself emperor, Beethoven famously tore off the dedication page of his third ('Eroica') symphony. In roughly the same time-frame during 1804–05 Wordsworth was coming to the conclusion of his first full version of The Prelude (completed May 20, 1805), with similar attention to Napoleon. I want to use this compositional coincidence as a lead-in to a concentrated reading of Book X of The Prelude which can lead to a stronger connection between Wordsworth and not just Beethoven, but the whole of nineteenth-century European literature, especially the great tradition of novels in France. By following carefully his intricate structuring of the stages of his crisis and its resolution we can arrive at a new way of seeing Wordsworth's links to the broad landscape of nineteenth-century European literature. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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3. Rootism, Modernity, and the Jew: Antisemitism and the Reactionary Imaginary, 1789–1945.
- Author
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Landa, Ishay
- Subjects
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SOCIAL change , *RACE identity , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *MODERNITY , *MARXIST philosophy - Abstract
The far-right identification of Jews with modernity has been noted by many scholars, yet most analyses have fallen short of offering a properly dialectical account of antisemitism, one that will scrutinise the antinomies at the heart of the antisemitic discourse and trace their relations to the contradictions of modernity itself. In this paper, I will make modernity as
movement the focus of the analysis.Modernity, philosophically underpinned by the Enlightenment, and politically ushered in by the French Revolution of 1789, was seen by its reactionary and fascist opponents both as a time of great upheaval, constant change and social disruption, but also as the setting-up of an era of stasis and degeneration. It was paradoxically decried, sometimes simultaneously, as both helplesslynomadic and incurablysedentary . And in both respects ‘the Jew’ and ‘the Jewish spirit’ were often placed, no matter how spuriously, at the very centre of attacks.Qua ‘wandering’ or ‘eternal’, the Jews were seen as embodying the spirit of restlessness and lack of roots, undermining tradition and fixed national and racial identities; theirdynamic role as revolutionaries, conspirators and rabble rousers was ritually denounced.Jews were also condemned, however, as a majorobstacle to movement and expansion, the arch-enemies of imperialism, seeking to establish a realm of universal brotherhood, peace and egalitarianism. By attacking the Jews, reactionaries and fascists thus attempted to settle their scores with a modernity that they feared and loathed in equal measure. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
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4. The guillotine: Shadow, spectacle and the terror.
- Author
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Carrabine, Eamonn
- Subjects
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,REVOLUTIONS ,REVENGE ,VIOLENCE ,REVOLUTIONARIES - Abstract
Of all the images generated by the French Revolution it is the guillotine that is the most notorious. From the beginning the apparatus constituted an elaborate visual spectacle, one that not only efficiently dispensed justice but also offered up a form of popular entertainment and ritualised collective vengeance. The paper seeks to shed fresh light on one of the most perplexing mysteries of the revolutionary era. How did enlightened individuals who had helped create the most democratic and egalitarian society yet seen in the world, descend into a totalitarian regime in which many thousands were arrested, tried without appeal and executed? Why did revolutionaries begin to kill one another, and how did the guillotine come to represent an ideal of Revolution? To answer these questions, the paper begins by looking more closely at the relationships between popular violence and state violence in the Revolution, before describing the invention of the guillotine and how audiences had to adjust to a new kind of spectacle, where terror emerges as a principle of government. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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5. The Hospital as a Beacon of Science? Parisian Academic Medicine around 1800.
- Author
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Stahnisch, Frank W.
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FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *MEDICAL care research , *CLINICAL medical education , *HISTORY of medicine ,FRENCH history - Abstract
Owing to medical historian Erwin H. Ackerknecht's (1906–1988) pioneering study "Medicine at the Paris Hospital, 1794–1848" (1967), the year 1794 is seen as the decisive separation date on which the development and reorganization of the Parisian clinical school—as a broad movement and a system of medical education and clinical practice—distanced it from the traditions of the 18th century. This precise dating is based on the "Rapport et projet de décret sur l'établissement d'une École centrale de Santé à Paris" (1794) by the French clinician and naturalist Antoine-François Fourcroy (1755–1809), which appeared five years after the French Revolution. Fourcroy was asked by the Conseil d'État to submit a detailed report in which he was obliged to comment on the existing health situation and the state of medical care and research. His report thereby ventured so far as to request the continued dissolution of all medical faculties in France, as these institutions were seen as counter-revolutionary hotbeds in the wider educational landscape of the Grande Nation. Fourcroy's recommendations were implemented a short time later; he had recommended that medical training should be established again in the traditional locations of Paris, Montpellier, and Strasbourg in France yet in the different settings of so-called health schools, Écoles de Santé. In this article, I look at the corresponding training and care structures after the French Revolution, as well as some of the specific reasons which led to the complete suspension of teaching in academic medicine at the time. In the more recent research literature, Ackerknecht's view has undergone some modifications, whereby the fixation on the date 1794 has been challenged since the French traditions of the royalistic period have hardly been considered. Furthermore, it has been argued that the reorganization of medicine during the time of the Empire remained largely based on knowledge structures derived from the previous 18th century. In order to keep the complex scientific, institutional, and socio-economic conditions of the context of Parisian Academic Medicine aligned, I first explore some developments up to the time of the French Revolution (1789), before assessing the implications of the reform of knowledge structures and curricular programs instigated since the 1790s, as these remain relevant to medical history in the 19th century. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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6. Looking for the Secular in Religious Archives — a Cross‐Channel Perspective.
- Author
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Vaughan, Geraldine
- Subjects
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SCHOOL records , *CHURCH schools , *RELIGIOUS schools , *CATHOLIC schools , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 - Abstract
Written from the perspective of a social historian trained in the French tradition, this article investigates how the study of nineteenth‐century Irish migrations to Britain contributes to the study of the nature of "religious archives." In France, the writing of social history during the twentieth century was heavily influenced by sociologists and their view that religious facts were cultural and social phenomena. This outtake was also encouraged by the classification of ecclesiastical archives which were transferred to State repositories and organised according to lay and secular categories after the French Revolution. This article explores nineteenth‐century Roman Catholic schooling in Scotland as a case study. Since 1918, Scottish Catholic school records have been transferred to public repositories and categorised in "secular" fashion. Investigating the case of religious schools means looking for secular matters in ecclesiastical school records and clerical notes (the diaries of Father Michael Condon, d. 1902, are an exceptional source on that matter). In the end, this article argues that there can be no strict separation in the historical exploration of the past between the use of "religious" and "secular" archives. Ecclesiastical preoccupations never excluded worldly concerns, and down‐to‐earth considerations were an integral part of parish and school lives. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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7. The myth of 'Jacobin Kemalism'?: influence of the French Revolution on Kemalist elite and ideology during the early republican period.
- Author
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Gülsunar, Emrah
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FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *MYTH , *IDEOLOGY , *EMPIRICAL research - Abstract
This study examines the first-hand sources of Kemalism to understand how and to what extent the French Revolution inspired the Kemalist elite and influenced Kemalism during the early republican period. In the literature, there is a general perception that the French Revolution and Jacobinism were highly influential on the Kemalists, but this perception mainly depends on broad interpretations without systematic empirical research. This study shows that there was really an influence, but not necessarily on the secular/Westernist reforms as proposed in the literature. Moreover, the alleged impact of Jacobinism on Kemalism was limited to only a few regime elites. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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8. Retrospective.
- Author
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TENTLER, LESLIE WOODCOCK
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CATHOLICS ,WORKING class ,CONTRACEPTION ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 - Published
- 2024
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9. Movement split: how the structure of revolutionary coalitions shapes revolutionary outcomes.
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Abrams, Benjamin
- Subjects
EGYPTIAN revolution, Egypt, 2011 ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,SOCIAL revolution ,HISTORICAL analysis ,SOCIAL processes - Abstract
This article investigates the relationship between the coalitional structure of revolutionary movements and revolutionary outcomes. Noting the chimerical nature of revolutionary coalitions, it introduces readers to the concept of 'movement split': the moment in a revolutionary process when, once a regime is overthrown, the revolutionary coalition fractures into 'radicals', who seek further, social revolution; and 'conservatives' who are satisfied with a limited, political revolution. By means of a comparative historical analysis of the 1789 French Revolution and 2011 Egyptian Revolution, it analyses the role of coalition structure in determining revolutionary outcomes after movement split. In both cases, the distribution of mobilizing capacity between radicals and conservatives was the key factor determining whether each revolutionary movement came to pursue a 'political' or 'social' revolutionary' program. Where conservatives retained control over mobilization, advancement of the revolutionary process ended once political revolution was achieved, while when radicals retained control, a process of social revolution was undertaken. Thus, when seeking to anticipate the trajectory of change an emergent revolutionary movement is liable to undertake, it is fruitful to examine whether it is radicals or conservatives who control its principal mobilizing structures. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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10. On the tendency of revolutions to devour their own children.
- Author
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Rouanet, Louis
- Subjects
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,REVOLUTIONS ,SOCIAL choice ,COLLECTIVE action ,PUNISHMENT - Abstract
Genuine revolutions often use violence not only against their enemies but also against their friends. This paper argues that using violence against the proponents of a revolution functions as a way to boost collective action. A weakest-link punishment against the revolutionaries contributing the least to the revolutionary cause can be a way to solve Tullock's paradox of revolutions. Further implications are developed. First, we show that those benefiting the most from the revolution and facing the lowest cost of punishing will self-select into the group using punishment to boost contributions to the revolutionary cause. Second, we explain that weakest-link punishment can be over-provided when its provision is decentralized, in which case centralizing punishment may be an efficient response. We use the French Revolution as a case study to illustrate our theory. While the proximate cause of the Terror during the French Revolution was to avoid free-riding, its underlying cause may not have been the "blank-slate" mindset of the revolutionaries but the reactionary and inflexible nature of the Ancien Régime's institutions. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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11. Reflections on Burns and the French Revolution.
- Author
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Harris, Bob
- Subjects
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,POLITICAL oratory ,RADICALISM ,SCOTTISH politics & government - Abstract
This paper revisits Burns's reactions to the French Revolution and its implications for British domestic reform through review of three crucial contexts which shaped his responses: the character and trajectory of Scottish reform politics in the early 1790s; loyalist volunteering in the mid-1790s; and the town of Dumfries where Burns came to live in late 1791. It re-examines and sheds new light on the tricky political balancing act in which Burns was compelled to engage in order to keep his post in the Excise service and avert potential local hostility to someone who clearly privately stood well outside the prevailing political consensus in Dumfries after late 1792. Closer attention to these contexts and the character of political rhetoric and discourses in the 1790s brings into sharper focus Burns's likely political views at this moment. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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12. France after 1789: Essay on Elster's France before 1789.
- Author
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Parent, Antoine
- Subjects
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,POLITICAL philosophy ,PHILOSOPHERS ,ACTORS - Abstract
In this essay on Elster's (2020) book, I expose my concerns about the ability of behavioral tools to correctly address the transition phase between the absolutist regime and the democratic institutions inherited from the French Revolution. Rehabilitating the forgotten analyses of contemporary political philosophers Quinet, de Sade, and Leroux, I defend the view that a correct understanding of the French Revolution's essence lies in its political philosophical dimension, not in the supposed psychological traits of its actors. I suggest a renewed way to apprehend and model revolutions, combining three levels of analysis: political philosophy, macroeconomic dynamics, and complexity economics. (JEL D72, D74, N13, N43, Z13) [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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13. A reformation to end the revolution: Germaine de Staël and the struggle for republican mores under directory France.
- Author
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Halo, Adela
- Subjects
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CULTS , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *PROTESTANTISM , *REFORMATION , *MANNERS & customs - Abstract
Between 1797 and 1798, Germaine de Staël argued that France needed a reformation to end the Revolution, proposing the adoption Protestantism as a religion of state. This proposal has been explained away as an obvious and uninteresting consequence of her Calvinist upbringing. While obviously relevant, Staël’s religious background is not a sufficient explanation for a proposal that would have upended the constitutional principles of the Directorial republic as well as centuries of tradition in France. I argue instead that Staël’s proposal is better understood in framework of the Directory’s plans to breach the state’s neutrality in religious matters, established in the 1795 Constitution, in order to promote love of the republic via a new religion, theophilanthropy. Thus, Staël identified a political opportunity for constitutional change in matters of religion and sought to steer the course towards an existing religion that, as she argued, had all the benefits that the Directory saw in theophilanthropy, but none of the pitfalls, especially the theophilanthropists’ association with the Terror. This re-interpretation of Staël’s proposal, made in Circonstances actuelles, has implications for our broader understanding of this work, hailed as her ‘most substantial contribution to political and constitutional theory’, and the Thermidorian republic. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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14. Soudní styly ve srovnávacím pohledu - historický a ideologický původ podoby současných soudních rozhodnutí.
- Author
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Hau, Vojtěch
- Subjects
JUDGES ,LEGAL judgments ,JUDICIAL power ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,LEGAL language - Abstract
Copyright of Pravnik is the property of Czech Academy of Sciences, Institute of State & Law and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
15. Social theory and overinterpretation.
- Author
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Reed, Isaac Ariail
- Subjects
SOCIAL theory ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,ANTHROPOSOPHY ,COMMUNITY of inquiry ,MARXIST philosophy - Abstract
Theory is the use of abstraction in the pursuit of understanding. In the human sciences, theory is a talmudic process of reading and conceptual dispute that carries the colligation of evidentiary signs (minimal interpretation) towards riskier, but more insightful and widely relevant, interpretations of the meanings, causes, and significance of human events (maximal interpretation). Yet, in making possible such maximal interpretations of society, politics, literature, and so forth, theory also introduces the possibility of overinterpreting evidence. Judgments that overinterpretation has occurred are made collectively within communities of inquiry. After developing Umberto Eco's theory of overinterpretation as part of a hermeneutic-semiotic account of theory in the human sciences, this paper conducts a case study of the rise and partial fall of the Marxist interpretation of the French Revolution. This reveals aspects of the process whereby patterns of maximal interpretation, carried through several academic generations, allow the development and refinement of knowledge and insight about an object of inquiry, on the one hand, and yet are subject to judgment as overinterpreted, on the other. Much more than a matter of falsification and/or the politics of intellectuals, the decline of the Marxist interpretation of the French Revolution involved a complex series of judgments about the degree to which an abstract theoretical terminology could continue to produce new and deeper understandings. In conclusion, the paper suggests that the talmudic aspect of social theory has affinities with the universal human capacity for thinking. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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16. Obstetrics during the French Revolution: political and medical controversies around the new obstetrical surgery.
- Author
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Danieli, Elena
- Subjects
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FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *NATURAL childbirth , *OBSTETRICS , *HOSPITAL maternity services , *OPERATIVE surgery , *BIRTHPLACES - Abstract
During the French Revolution, obstetrics underwent substantial transformations in practice, teaching, and the physical spaces where it was conducted. The revolutionary authorities implemented reforms in French medical institutions that promoted an instrument-centred style and the dissemination of novel surgical techniques in obstetrics. The selection of professors for the obstetrics chair at the newly established École de santé and the appointment of chiefs for the new maternity ward in Paris favoured proponents of a mechanistic approach to labour assistance. This essay explores the theoretical principles and societal pressures that guided these transformative reforms and the remarkable changes they introduced in healthcare and in the practise of medicine and surgery. Furthermore, it examines the consolidation of new epistemological, ethical, and professional boundaries within the context of late eighteenth-century French obstetrics. A critical section of this study focuses on the debate ignited by the contemporaries who voiced concerns that the rise of surgical interventions on pregnant women's bodies might result in unwarranted violence, in a diminishing of midwives’ roles, and in a departure from the tradition of natural childbirth. These controversies among obstetricians highlight significant contradictions within the Revolutionary medical reforms. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
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17. Joel Barlow in Denmark: American Republicanism and the Republic of Translations in Continental Europe in the Revolutionary 1790s.
- Author
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Von Eggers, Nicolai
- Subjects
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AMERICAN Revolutionary War, 1775-1783 , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *REPUBLICANISM , *BABY strollers , *HISTORIANS - Abstract
Through a case study of the Danish and German translations of the American revolutionary Joel Barlow's 'Advice to the Privileged Orders of Europe' (1792), this article explores the role of translations and the example of the American Revolution in forming ideas of republicanism in the Age of Revolutions. While it is today a little-known text, the article shows that Barlow's Advice had a significant impact on the formation of revolutionary ideology in the Northern Germany and Denmark. The article furthermore argues that contrary to what historians have hitherto believed, republicanism did make its way into Denmark in the period. Here, the article shows, it influenced the political ideas of key intellectuals such as Christen Henriksen Pram, August Hennings, and C.U.D. von Eggers. Because censorship made it difficult to express republican ideas, studying translations may give us a fuller and more precise picture of political ideas in the Age of Revolutions including in places like Denmark. The article thus argues that Barlow and his text was part of a broader ‘republic of translations,’ which was transformed in the wake of the American and French Revolutions and through which spread republicanism across the world, including Northern Europe. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
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18. Farmaciști și chimiști francezi în perioada napoleoniană (I).
- Author
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Manolescu, Loredana-Sabina-Cornelia, Pîrvu, Daniela-Aurelia, Burlibașa, Andrei, Ștețiu, Maria-Antonia, Căminișteanu, Florentina, Popescu, Mircea, and Burlibașa, Mihai
- Subjects
- *
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *PHARMACY , *HISTORIANS , *PHYSICS , *BOTANY - Abstract
Napoleon Bonaparte was the Emperor of France, consolidating and initiating numerous reforms of the French Revolution. Regarded by many historians as the greatest military leader of the modern era, he conquered a significant portion of European territory while also focusing on modernizing the nation he led. In this multi-part structured material, we will attempt to provide concise biographies of notable personalities in the French medical world who distinguished themselves during the Napoleonic era, emphasizing not only in the fields of pharmacy and chemistry but also in botany and physics. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
19. Authority and Order: Portalis and the Implementation of the Concordat of 1801.
- Author
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Harmon, Joseph P.
- Subjects
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FREEDOM of religion , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *SCHISM , *NINETEENTH century , *LEGISLATORS - Abstract
The success of the Concordat of 1801 in establishing a modus vivendi between post-revolutionary France and the Catholic Church ought not be taken for granted. It owes in significant degree to the design and application of Napoleon's advisor on religious affairs, Jean-Etienne Marie Portalis. The Concordat is appreciated for having set the stage for the ultramontane Catholicism of nineteenth-century France, but as legislator and administrator, Portalis was looking back to the legal traditions of the liberties of the Gallican Church and the supremacy of the sovereign. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
20. The Dramaturgy of Demise: On Goethe's Der Groß-Cophta.
- Author
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Lande, Joel B.
- Subjects
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SWINDLERS & swindling , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *DRAMATIC structure , *FIGURATIVE art , *SCHOLARS - Abstract
Goethe's first drama written in the wake of the French Revolution, Der Groß-Cophta, has garnered little favor from audiences and scholars since its first publication. This essay argues that Goethe's comedy inverts fundamental dramaturgical conventions of tragedy, revealing a social and political world in collapse. It shows that patterns of literary figuration first articulated in Der Groß-Cophta extend across several of Goethe's literary engagements with revolutionary tumult. Confidence men and narratives of lost innocence emerge as crucial elements in Goethe's diagnosis of the disintegration of ethical life responsible for the demise of the ancien régime. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
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- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
21. KOSOVA’DA 1979 SONRASI ARNAVUT MİLLİYETÇİLİK HAREKETLERİ.
- Author
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ÖMER ULUKAYA, Esin
- Subjects
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WORLD War I , *NATIONALISM , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *CABINET system , *HISTORIANS - Abstract
The 19th century is characterized as a period marked by the proliferation of nationalist movements in the Balkans. A significant number of studies on Albanian nationalism conducted by Albanian historians argue that Ottoman rule was an important factor in the increase of Albanian nationalism in Kosovo. Concurrently, there exist scholarly perspectives linking the genesis of the Albanian nationalist movement to global dynamics. Following the aftermath of the First World War, the international milieu alongside the expansionist endeavors of Western powers served to amplify Albanian national consciousness. This phenomenon found resonance in Kosovo as well. Economic volatility and prevailing social disparities in the region exacerbated discontent among the populace, fostering insurgencies. Beyond economic imperatives, the exigency for instituting a democratic parliamentary framework emerged. Consequently, the groundwork for the Albanian parliamentary system was laid during this epoch. Some sources attribute Albanian nationalism to the tenets of the 1789 French Revolution, setting it apart from other Balkan nations. Nationalism persists as a prevalent discourse, particularly in the Balkan region. This study aims to probe into the historical antecedents that propelled the evolution of Albanian nationalism in Kosovo post-1979, along with evaluating the contemporary regional landscape. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
22. Дискурсивні та інституційні стандарти справедливості у модерній світ-системі.
- Author
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БУЛАТЕВИЧ, МИКОЛА
- Subjects
JUSTICE ,SOCIAL cohesion ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,SOCIAL order ,CIVIL society ,IDEOLOGY ,ENVIRONMENTAL justice - Abstract
In the article the essence of standards of justice in the modern world-system is outlined in a general way. It is shown that these standards emerged in the European capitalist world-economy in consequence of the French Revolution. Standards of justice are interpreted as ideological semantic constructions that have been institutionalized simultaneously with establishment, first, of the ideology of liberalism as the geo-culture of the modern world-system and, second, of model of liberal state. Standards of justice are considered within theoretical theses and methodological guiding lines of I. Wallerstein's theory of the modern world-system. However, some theoretical theses of J. Alexander's civil society theory are also used to supplement and concretize considered in the article problems with some new arguments. For instance, Alexander's conceptual toolkit helped to distinguish discursive and institutional standards of justice. Reasons and peculiarities of establishment of standards of justice are considered and role these standards played in the providing of development of the modern world-system is shown. In particular, it is elucidated that owing to these standards elites of the core countries of the modern world-system managed to redirect the rebellion energy of the lower strata from anti-systemic revolutions to struggle for inclusion to liberal state. This helped to calm the lower strata down and to guard structures of the modern world-system against essential damages. Standards of justice contributed to legitimation of social order of the modern world-system. Full integration of the lower strata to newly created national societies reinforced social solidarity, and this strengthened the core states even more. It is shown that for today in particular countries of periphery and semi-periphery trends of revision of current standards of justice and their replacement by alternative semantic constructions become visible. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
23. LA GUILLOTINE RÉVOLUTIONNAIRE. PEINE DE MORT, JUSTICE D'EXCEPTION ET SENSIBILITÉS DANS LA FRANCE RÉVOLUTIONNAIRE (1789-1804).
- Author
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DEBAT, Guillaume
- Subjects
GUILLOTINE ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,PUBLIC opinion ,REVOLUTIONARIES ,TERROR - Abstract
The article focuses on the comprehensive history of the guillotine during the French Revolution, examining its role as both a symbol of progress and a representation of terror. Topics include the evolution of public perceptions of the guillotine, its use as a tool of exceptional justice in revolutionary France, and its impact on the social, political, and emotional landscape of the era.
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- 2024
24. LES OUVRIÈRES, LES ADMINISTRATEURS ET LE PEUPLE SOUVERAIN.
- Author
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GODINEAU, Dominique
- Subjects
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,WOMEN labor leaders ,REVOLUTIONS ,CITIES & towns ,MUNICIPAL government - Abstract
The article focuses on the involvement of women in labor conflicts in Paris during the French Revolution, highlighting their often overlooked roles and the political dimensions of their struggles. Topics include the insurrection at a municipal sack repair workshop in 1794, the mobilization of female spinners at the Jacobins' filature from December 1793 to mid-1794, and the broader social and political context affecting these labor disputes.
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- 2024
25. SORTIR DE L'ARSENAL, ENTRER EN POLITIQUE : LES OUVRIERS DE L'ARSENAL DE TOULON DURANT LES PREMIÈRES ANNÉES DE LA RÉVOLUTION (PRINTEMPS 1789-PRINTEMPS 1793).
- Author
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SAINT-ROMAN, Julien
- Subjects
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,ARSENALS ,MILITARY museums ,ROYALISTS ,MONARCHY - Abstract
Copyright of Annales Historiques de la Révolution Française is the property of Librairie Armand Colin and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
26. TRAVAIL ET CITOYENNETÉ À PARIS SOUS LA RÉVOLUTION : OSMOSE, MIMÉTISME, CONTAMINATION.
- Author
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BURSTIN, Haim
- Subjects
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,CITIZENSHIP ,MIMICRY (Biology) ,OSMOSIS ,SOCIAL reality ,HERMENEUTICS - Abstract
Copyright of Annales Historiques de la Révolution Française is the property of Librairie Armand Colin and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
27. LA NAISSANCE DE L'ARTISTE-CITOYEN ? MUTATIONS POLITIQUES ET RECOMPOSITIONS PROFESSIONNELLES DANS LE MÉTIER DE COMÉDIEN EN FRANCE (1789-1791).
- Author
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ROCHEFORT, Suzanne
- Subjects
CITIZENSHIP ,CONSTITUTIONAL law ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,CITIES & towns ,MUNICIPAL government - Abstract
Copyright of Annales Historiques de la Révolution Française is the property of Librairie Armand Colin and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
28. TRAVAIL ET POLITIQUE, 1789-1815.
- Author
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GODINEAU, Dominique and GUICHETEAU, Samuel
- Subjects
LABOR policy ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,POLITICAL development ,HISTORY of labor ,LABOR historians - Abstract
The article focuses on the evolving historical exploration of labor and politics from 1789 to 1815, emphasizing how these themes have gained prominence over time. Topics include the historical treatment of labor during the French Revolution, the interaction between labor issues and political developments, and recent scholarly efforts to integrate labor history with broader political contexts.
- Published
- 2024
29. Diccionario simbólico del republicanismo histórico español (siglos XIX-XX).
- Author
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Fernández-Sirvent, Rafael
- Subjects
COMPARATIVE method ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,WESTERN countries ,ENCYCLOPEDIAS & dictionaries ,REPUBLICANISM ,AFRICAN diaspora - Abstract
Copyright of Pasado y Memoria. Revista de Historia Contemporánea is the property of Pasado y Memoria and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
30. A.W. Rehberg, <italic>Investigations Concerning the French Revolution</italic> (1793)
- Author
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Kryluk, Michael
- Subjects
- *
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *POLITICAL philosophy , *POLITICAL science - Abstract
This is a translation of selections from Part One, Chapter One of Rehberg's
Investigations , which contains his critique of the philosophical principles animating the French Revolution. No English translation of the text currently exists. TheInvestigations was one of the most influential philosophical treatments of the Revolution in eighteenth-century Germany and remains an important specimen of ‘Kantian’ political theory from the 1790s. TheInvestigations had a clear impact on Kant's political philosophy and the work of the early Fichte. The translation is accompanied by an editorial introduction that introduces the reader to Rehberg and outlines his core arguments. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
31. Intervention at Home: Representing Migrants in German Romanticism.
- Author
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Middelhoff, Frederike
- Subjects
- *
GERMAN romances , *ROMANTICISM , *IMMIGRANTS , *EMIGRATION & immigration , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 - Abstract
This article explores how German Romantic writing reflected on migration and thereby intervened in contemporary discourses about émigrés seeking refuge in German-speaking territories after the French Revolution in 1789. Discussing different representations of French exiles in both fiction and translation, I argue that some Romantics were participating in an "intervention at home:" staying put, observing both the unprecedented overthrow of the French monarchy and, later on, the aggression of French expansionism, Romantic writers contributed to contemporary debates about migration with stories and characters meant to reflect on, evoke empathy with, or create aversion to French migrants. German Romantic writing thus encouraged both emotional responses to and specific ideas about the intricate relationship between migration and nation-building in early nineteenth-century German-speaking countries. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
32. Freedoms in the Hungarian April Laws of 1848.
- Author
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Gosztonyi, Gergely
- Subjects
- *
POLITICAL rights , *ACADEMIC freedom , *HUNGARIANS , *LIBERTY , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *FREEDOM of religion , *FREEDOM of the press - Abstract
The French Revolution and the changes in Europe in the first half of the 19th century increasingly called into question the caste order, under which only a small percentage of society could enjoy freedoms, including not only political but also private and criminal rights. Based on Western European ideas followed by the legal fight of brave Hungarians, in 1848, Hungary almost got its constitution in the form of 31 Acts, called the Hungarian April Laws. Among others, those Acts consisted of the issues of equality of rights, political rights, freedom of the press, freedom of religion and academic freedom. Freedoms that, after the Austro-Hungarian Compromise, the Hungarian Parliament went back to and built a reform era on. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
33. Friedrich Wilhelm Joseph Schelling: Historisch-kritische Ausgabe. Reihe I: Werke. Band 14. Vorlesungen ueber die Methode des academischen Studium. Philosophie und Religion. Und andere Texte (1803 – 1805). Hrsg. v. Patrick Leistner und Alexander Schubach. Stuttgart 2021. ISBN: 978-3-7728-2644-3. XII, 552 S., 2 Abb
- Author
-
Walter, Martin
- Subjects
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,BIBLIOGRAPHY ,CRITICAL theory ,INTELLECTUAL life ,PRAGMATISM - Abstract
Copyright of Kant-Studien is the property of De Gruyter and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
34. Practical Philosophy from Kant to Hegel. Edited by James A. Clarke and Gabriel Gottlieb. Cambridge: CUP, 2021 [online], 2022 [print]. 285 pp. ISBN: 9781108703284.
- Author
-
Molyneux, Bill
- Subjects
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,DUTY ,HUMAN rights ,IDEALISM ,CONCORD ,CRITICISM - Abstract
Copyright of Kant-Studien is the property of De Gruyter and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
35. The Burning of Bédoin: Crime, Complicity, and Civil War in Revolutionary France.
- Author
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Clarke, Joseph
- Subjects
- *
CRIMINAL investigation , *IMPRISONMENT , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *JUDICIAL process , *CIVIL war , *ATROCITIES - Abstract
On May 28, 1794, a criminal investigation that had begun almost a month before concluded with the execution of sixty-three men and women, the imprisonment of fifteen more, and a few days later the destruction of an entire village. This article examines the burning of Bédoin, the crime that provoked it, and the judicial process that accompanied it, to explore the relationship between criminal cause and punitive effect during the Terror of year II. As a case study in revolutionary justice, this episode appears extreme, but this article argues that it allows us to interrogate the meanings that ordinary revolutionaries attached to terms like crime and complicity when the survival of the state seemed at stake. In looking beyond the Terror to the controversies that enveloped this village's destruction, this article also examines the aftermath of atrocity to consider how a society comes to terms with crime when both the definition of criminality and the identity of the criminal are in flux. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
36. Universalism and Historicism: A Conflicting Inheritance of the Enlightenment.
- Author
-
Haller, Benedikt
- Subjects
- *
HISTORICISM , *ENLIGHTENMENT , *EUROPEAN history , *WORLD War II , *CULTURAL hegemony , *EIGHTEENTH century , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *HUMANITY - Abstract
Enlightenment thought and its contemporary followers usually support two contradictory principles simultaneously. The first is universality. Truth is universal because it is truth for all. Claims to universality are made in logic and science, but also in areas that are culturally or politically controversial. Recently, universalism has become a key term to express a fundamental critique of identity politics. For much of European history, Christianity provided such a universal truth. But with the decline of its cultural hegemony and the rise of particular nation-states, conflicting truth claims became weapons in violent conflicts, leading Hobbes to argue that dangerous truth claims must be neutralized by robust political power. In the eighteenth century, rationalism became more optimistic, interpreting universalism as cosmopolitanism based on universal reason and progress through history. The second principle is historicism, which is the self-reflexive look at the historical origins of universal claims and theories. Historicism emerged in the nineteenth century as a response to the application of rationalism to history. It challenged the universal claims of the French Revolution, emphasizing instead the unique value of each historical entity. This revealed a fundamental paradox: when universalism becomes self-reflexive, it recognizes that it has non-universal historical origins, thereby undermining itself. After the devastation of World War II and the Holocaust, the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (1948) represented a significant effort toward a new universalism. It sought to establish human rights as universal principles for the emerging world order. But history repeated itself: Historicism once again weakened confidence in human rights. The enemies of human rights take advantage of this weakness. We therefore have to live with the paradox that universalism is necessary because humanity shares a single world, but that historical self-reflection is also unavoidable. In other words, the Enlightenment principle of universalism must accept historicism as an integral part of itself. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
37. The concept of dignity in Edmund Burke's writings on the French revolution.
- Author
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Harrison, Samuel
- Subjects
- *
DIGNITY , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *POLITICAL science , *RADICALISM - Abstract
This paper argues that the concept of dignity played an important role in the political thought of Edmund Burke. It seeks to show that, in contrast with the egalitarian and individual version of dignity associated with Immanuel Kant, Burke devised a conception of dignity that rested on reverence, grandeur and formality, to be manifested through institutions, customs, and social relations. Burkean dignity was thus closely linked with the ancient constitution. In his thought, dignity played an essential role in maintaining social stability and ensuring wise governance. This conviction informed Burke's opposition to the French Revolution, which he feared would destroy the conditions necessary for dignity to thrive. Unpicking Burke's understanding of dignity thus gives us new insights into the intricacies of his political thought and another perspective on his opposition to the French Revolution. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
38. Reverberations of Revolution: Sound, Politics and Religious Enthusiasm in the 1790s.
- Author
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Denney, Peter
- Subjects
SOUND reverberation ,ENTHUSIASM ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,WORSHIP (Christianity) ,PRACTICAL politics - Abstract
This essay examines the significance of sound in religion in the context of the British debate about the French Revolution. It analyses loyalist sermons and pamphlets to show that anxieties about plebeian noise exacerbated concerns about religious enthusiasm and its relationship to political radicalism. Accordingly, the acoustic aspects of worship became an issue in conservative propaganda, especially the writings of Anglican clergymen. By contrast, Christian reformers found the sound of enthusiastic religion a source of empowerment. Focusing on prophecies, hymns and sermons, this essay argues that a group of plebeian Dissenters, whose piety shaped their commitment to reform, attributed a revolutionary meaning to the sonic intensity of religious enthusiasm. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
39. THE DECIMALISATION OF REPUBLICAN TIME. THE FRENCH REVOLUTION WHICH FAILED (1793-1795).
- Author
-
DUDZIK, MICHAEL
- Subjects
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,CIRCLE ,REPUBLICANS ,JUST-in-time systems ,CLOCKS & watches - Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
40. Republics, Revolutions and Racialisation: The South African Republic at the 1889 Paris Exposition Universelle.
- Author
-
Lukasiewicz, Mariusz
- Subjects
REVOLUTIONS ,RACIALIZATION ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,IMPERIALISM ,ETHNOLOGY - Abstract
Copyright of Historia is the property of Historical Association of South Africa and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
41. The Somewhat Organized Violence of Revolutionary Paris, 1789-1792.
- Author
-
Shusterman, Noah
- Subjects
- *
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *AGE of Revolutions (1775-1848) , *VIOLENCE , *NON-state actors (International relations) ,HISTORY of Paris, France, 1789-1799 ,FRENCH military history, 1789-1815 ,BOURBON dynasty, France, 1589-1789 - Abstract
The French Revolution's first three years were marked by fighting between different armed groups in a fluid field of violence among state, nonstate, and quasi-state actors. The forces of order were less organized than their titles would indicate, while opposition forces were better-organized and -trained than they portrayed themselves to be. Paris was a military theater where victory was determined by the opposition's ability to attract both armed fighters and widespread popular support, though a government that was unpopular with the population of Paris but that had the support of the city's military could continue to rule. Governments fell when they lost control of military forces. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2023
42. Half-Digested Memory: Alimentary Aesthetics in Danish Travelogues during the French Revolution.
- Author
-
Mentlen, Timon Von
- Subjects
- *
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *POETICS , *ARTISTIC creation , *MEMORY , *AESTHETICS , *WRITING processes - Abstract
In 1789, during the outset of the French Revolution, Jens Baggesen (1764–1826) embarked on a journey traversing Germany, Switzerland, and France. His experiences were later crystallized into a two-volume travelogue, Labyrinten , published between 1792 and 1793. In a similar vein, in 1793, Adam Moltke (1765–1843), a close friend of Baggesen, visited the besieged city of Mainz and subsequently chronicled his experiences in Reise nach Maynz (1794), also a two-volume work. Both authors, profoundly impacted by their travels, expressed a compulsion to write as an outlet. Intriguingly, their texts employ alimentary and metabolic metaphors to depict the act of experiencing as a form of ingestion, where impressions are consumed, assimilated, and eventually transformed into written narrative. This portrayal of memory and writing as a bodily process sharply diverges from the classical ideals of artistic and literary purity. This article argues that these alimentary and metabolic metaphors represent a subversive poetics, challenging conventional literary norms and offering a novel perspective on the interplay between human experience, bodily processes, and literary creation. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
43. Romantic Hope and "Black Despair": A Brief History.
- Author
-
Schey, Taylor
- Subjects
- *
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *ROMANTICISM , *SECULARIZATION (Theology) , *RACIALIZATION , *HOPE , *SLAVERY - Abstract
The article focuses on the historical emergence of political hope and its connection to the French Revolution, Romanticism, and the secularization of theological ideas. Topics include the conceptual development of political hope as a technology of racialization, the association of despair with racial slavery in the British political imagination, and the transformation of despair into a metaphysical condition linked to slavery, reinforcing racial hierarchies in the Romantic era.
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
44. Deleuze and Guattari on the French Revolution: Problems, Universal Minority, and the Bourgeoisie.
- Author
-
Underwood, Alex
- Subjects
- *
MINORITIES , *DEMOCRACY , *CAPITALISM , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 - Abstract
This article explores Deleuze and Guattari's theory of revolution in light of their comments on the French Revolution and intersection with the work of Marx. I argue that Deleuze associates revolution with a reformulation of the "problems" that condition experience, something Deleuze and Guattari then complicate through their insistence that institutional practice remain subject to the unfolding of an "indeterminate" yet collective revolutionary identity. I argue that the most important aspect of their theory for contemporary political thought is its argument for the necessity of uniting disparate forms of political experimentation without introducing institutions grounded in general conceptions of the subject, and conclude by discussing the emphasis they place on overcoming the "cogito of communication," a discursive "subject in general" essential to contemporary capitalist democracies. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
45. Revolution and Nation: Johann Gottlieb Fichte's Late Philosophy of Religion.
- Author
-
Asmuth, Christoph
- Subjects
- *
PHILOSOPHY of religion , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *BROTHERLINESS - Abstract
Johann Gottlieb Fichte's philosophy of religion combines revolutionary pathos with Christian convictions and transcendental philosophical insights. The result is a bourgeois philosophy of religion that preaches freedom, equality and brotherhood, expects the national upswing of a still-longed-for Germany based on the example of revolutionary France, and praises all this as a continuation of Kant's philosophy. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
46. L’ÉCHO DE VALMY : MÉMOIRES D’UNE BATAILLE DE LA RÉVOLUTION FRANC¸ AISE.
- Author
-
MEYER, Élise
- Subjects
BATTLE of Valmy, France, 1792 ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,COUNTERREVOLUTIONARIES ,MEMORY ,FRENCH Third Republic - Abstract
The article focuses on the significance of the Battle of Valmy in French history, exploring its evolution from a minor event to a significant symbol of national memory. Topics include the battle's initial reception as a mere cannonade, the development of opposing memories (Republican and counter-revolutionary), its exploitation by Louis-Philippe to shape his image, and its transformation into a republican myth during the Third Republic.
- Published
- 2024
47. RELIRE LA PRÉ-RÉVOLUTION. QUELLES DEMANDES DE DROITS ? (1780-1790).
- Author
-
ANDRO, Gaïd
- Subjects
HISTORIOGRAPHY ,MONARCHY ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,REVOLUTIONARIES ,REVOLUTIONS - Abstract
Copyright of Annales Historiques de la Révolution Française is the property of Librairie Armand Colin and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
48. AKTUALNOST HEGELOVA LIBERALIZMA. FURIJE DESTRUKCIJE U DANAŠNJE DOBA.
- Author
-
Zovko, Jure and Trešćec, Nives Delija
- Subjects
DOCTRINAL theology ,CHRISTIAN communities ,FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 ,POLITICAL opposition ,LIBERALISM - Abstract
Copyright of Church in the World / Crkva u Svijetu is the property of University of Split, Catholic Faculty of Theology and its content may not be copied or emailed to multiple sites or posted to a listserv without the copyright holder's express written permission. However, users may print, download, or email articles for individual use. This abstract may be abridged. No warranty is given about the accuracy of the copy. Users should refer to the original published version of the material for the full abstract. (Copyright applies to all Abstracts.)
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
49. Alexandre Kojève: revolution and terror.
- Author
-
Rutkevich, Alexey M.
- Subjects
- *
REVOLUTIONS , *FEAR of death , *FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *EIGHTEENTH century , *ARISTOCRACY (Social class) - Abstract
When discussing the French Revolution and Napoleon in his lectures from 1933 to 1939, Alexandre Kojève had in mind events in Russia. The clash between the "old order," with its Masters, and the worker Slaves corresponded for him more with the images of pre-revolutionary Russian journalism than with the wigged aristocrats and French bourgeoisie of the end of the eighteenth century. In his lectures, behind Napoleon, as a revolutionary emperor, there exists, however secretly or openly, the figure of Stalin, with his plans for the "building of socialism in one country," his five-year plans, collectivization, and terror. Kojève's ontology and anthropology diverge both from Hegel's version of the two as well as with Marxism, incorporating different theses from Nietzsche and Heidegger's Daseinanalytik. Just as in The Phenomenology of Spirit, terror plays a central role in interpreting revolution, yet it is conceived in the spirit of a Heideggerian "being-toward-death." The relation between Master and Slave begins with fear of death, and it is destroyed by fear of death in the face of revolutionary terror. In this article, Kojève's philosophy converges with the various versions of "left Nietzscheanism," which were particularly widespread in prerevolutionary Russia. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
50. "Cancelled" by the Revolution?: The Limits of Celebrity in A Tale of Two Cities.
- Author
-
Bridgham, Elizabeth
- Subjects
- *
FRENCH Revolution, 1789-1799 , *FAME , *CELEBRITIES , *VIOLENCE - Abstract
Inspired by a teaching experience in which a group of students equated the mob violence of the French Revolution with the contemporary phenomenon of "cancel culture," this article considers the ways in which Dickens's A Tale of Two Cities incorporates a consideration of the foundations and limits of celebrity power. By examining contemporary studies of the history and significance of "cancellation," we can understand their relevance to a Dickens who was anxious about maintaining his celebrity status and controlling his image amid a marital scandal that threatened his ability to do both. Read through this lens, the experience of Doctor Manette, a character who uses his celebrity to protect his loved ones and whose celebrity power is then turned against him, speaks to our present moment as Dickens's expression of concern at what might happen when a previously adoring public takes the reins of reputation from the prominent. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]
- Published
- 2024
- Full Text
- View/download PDF
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