It was a splendid idea to compile a critical dictionary of the French Revolution, and the idea has been splendidly executed… A great work.

- Conor Cruise O'Brien, New York Review of Books

<i>A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution</i> is really a manifesto representing the views of François Furet, who is now the most influential historian of the French Revolution in the world… Mr. Furet and his collaborators have revived interest in the philosophical problems of modern democracy and shown the importance of the French Revolution in establishing the limits of modern political debate.

- Lynn Hunt, New York Times Book Review

Not the least merit of Furet and Ozouf’s spectacular <i>Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution</i> is to take declared meaning at face value; to restore, in fact, full historical autonomy to the conflict of ideas. Those not within the guild of self-described ‘professional historians’ may be amazed to hear that such conflicts have ever not been taken seriously in their own right. But it may well have taken this monumental work…to reinstate their full causal power. In the <i>Dictionary</i>, in particular, the play of debate and its intersection with the combat of personalities and the shaping of institutions is given primary significance. The great moments of the French Revolution are rescued from compression into the social structure or burial beneath symbolic bricolage… No praise can really be too high for what this work represents: spectacular scholarship, consistently gripping writing, and intellectual penetration… [It] adds up to a coherent vision of the Revolution (all the more remarkable for being written by more than 20 hands). It is certainly the most enduring book to be published in the bicentennial year.

- Simon Schama, New Republic

Se alle

In all respects, this <i>Dictionary</i> of more than a thousand pages is a monument of scholarship, and an object of elegant quality, served by original and suggestive illustrations and by a rare quality of writing.

- Michelle Perrot, Libération

<i>A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution</i> has already been hailed as the literary event of the bicentennial… This success has come from the originality of its format. In effect, the entire team of historians, led by François Furet and Mona Ozouf, has broken with the traditional forms: chronological narratives, monographs, biographies…in order to adopt a new style that reconciles these diverse approaches. The work is erudite but unfolds like a historical novel. It is enormous—a thousand pages—but reads like a magazine with ten-page articles illustrating the one hundred ‘key words’ of the Revolution.

- Janick Jossin, Le Nouvel Observateur

This <i>Dictionary</i> represents what I would judge to be one of the most comprehensive statements yet of the new historiography, against <i>Annales</i>; and in so doing, it represents what I would also judge to be one of the clearest interpretations of a renewal of liberal thinking in France which in its distinctiveness, its break from standing conceptions, will be of general interest to all but the most parochial of Anglo-Americans.

- Geoffrey Hawthorn, Cambridge University,

A spectacular collection of essays covering virtually every aspect of the French Revolution, written by the most powerful minds currently working on its history. As a whole, the book provides a stunning vindication of the centrality of politics to the lasting significance of the event. Some of the essays—Furet on Quinet, Higonnet on the Sans-culottes, Ozouf on Revolutionary Religion—are miniature masterpieces. The bicentennial is unlikely to produce any other work that serves up so rich and nourishing an intellectual feast.

- Simon Schama, Harvard University,

Two centuries later, the French Revolution—that extraordinary event that founded modern democracy—continues to give rise to a reevaluation of essential questions. The ambition of this magnificent volume is not only to present the reader with the research of a wide range of international scholars on those questions, but also to bring one into the heart of the issues still under lively debate.Its form is as original as its goal: neither dictionary, in the traditional sense of the word, nor encyclopedia, it is deliberately limited to some ninety-nine entries organized alphabetically by key words and themes under five major headings: events, including the Estates General and the Terror; actors, such as Marie Antoinette, Marat, and Napoleon Bonaparte; institutions and creations, among them Revolutionary Calendar and Suffrage; ideas, covering, for example, Ancien Régime, the American Revolution, and Liberty; and historians and commentators, from Hegel to Tocqueville. In addition, there are synoptic indexes of names and themes that give the reader easy access to the entire volume as well as a key to its profound coherence.What unifies all the varied topics brought together in this dictionary is their authors’ effort to be “critical.” As such, the book rejects the dogmatism of closed systems and definitive interpretations. Its aim is less to make a complete inventory of the findings of the history of the French Revolution than to take stock of what remains problematical about those findings; this work thus offers the additional special quality of incorporating the rich historiographical literature unceasingly elaborated since 1789.With A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution, François Furet and Mona Ozouf invite the reader to recross the first two centuries of French democracy in order to gain a better understanding of the origins of the world in which we live today.
Les mer
Two centuries later, the French Revolution—that event that founded modern democracy—continues to give rise to a reevaluation of essential questions. This volume not only presents the reader with the research of a wide range of international scholars on those questions, but also brings one into the heart of the issues still under lively debate.
Les mer
*1. Events * Chouannerie / Francois Furet * Coups d'Etat / Denis Richet * De-Christianization / Mona Ozouf * Elections / Patrice Gueniffey * Estates General / Ran Halevi * Federalism / Mona Ozouf * Federation / Mona Ozouf * Great Fear / Jacques Revel * Italian Campaign / Denis Richet * King's Trial / Mona Ozouf * Night of August 4 / Francois Furet * The Revolution and Europe / Alan Forrest * Revolutionary Journees / Denis Richet * Terror / Francois Furet * Treaties of Basel and The Hague / Denis Richet * Varennes / Mona Ozouf * Vendee / Francois Furet *2. Actors * Individuals * Babeuf / Francois Furet * Barnave / Francois Furet * Carnot / Patrice Gueniffey * Condorcet / Keith M. Baker * Danton / Mona Ozouf * Lafayette / Patrice Gueniffey * Louis XVI / Francois Furet * Marat / Mona Ozouf * Marie Antoinette / Jacques Revel * Mirabeau / Francois Furet * Napoleon Bonaparte / Francois Furet * Necker / Marcel Gauchet * Robespierre / Patrice Gueniffey * Sieyes / Keith M. Baker * Groups * Emigres / Massimo Boffa * Enrages / Denis Richet * Feuillants / Ran Halevi * Girondins / Mona Ozouf * Hebertists / Denis Richet * Monarchiens / Ran Halevi * Montagnards / Mona Ozouf * Sans-culottes / Patrice Higonnet * Thermidorians / Bronislaw Baczko *3. Institutions and Creations * Army / Alan Forrest * Assignats / Michel Bruguiere * Civil Code / Joseph Goy * Civil Constitution of the Clergy / Francois Furet * Clubs and Popular Societies / Patrice Gueniffey and Ran Halevi * Committee of Public Safety / Denis Richet * Constitution / Keith M. Baker * Departement / Mona Ozouf *Maximum / Francois Furet * National Properties / Louis Bergeron * Paris Commune / Patrice Gueniffey * Revolutionary Assemblies / Denis Richet * Revolutionary Calendar / Mona Ozouf * Revolutionary Government / Francois Furet * Revolutionary Religion / Mona Ozouf * Suffrage / Patrice Gueniffey * Taxes / Gail Bossenga *4. Ideas * American Revolution / Philippe Raynaud * Ancien Regime / Francois Furet * Aristocracy / David D. Bien * Centralization / Yann Fauchois * Counterrevolution / Massimo Boffia * Democracy / Philippe Raynaud * Enlightenment / Bronislaw Baczko * Equality / Mona Ozouf * Feudal System / Francois Furet * Fraternity / Mona Ozouf * Jacobinism / Francois Furet * Liberty / Mona Ozouf * Montesquieu / Bernard Manin * Nation / Pierre Nora * Natural Borders / Denis Richet * Physiocrats / Pierre Rosanvallon * Public Spirit / Mona Ozouf * Regeneration / Mona Ozouf * Republic / Pierre Nora * Revolution / Mona Ozouf * Rights of Man / Marcel Gauchet * Rousseau / Bernard Manin * Sovereignty / Keith M. Baker * Vandalism / Bronislaw Baczko * Voltaire / Mona Ozouf *5. Historians and Commentators * Academic History of the Revolution / Francois Furet * Blanc / Francois Furet * Buchez / Francois Furet * Burke / Gerard Gengembre * Constant / Marcel Gauchet * Fichte / Luc Ferry * Guizot / Pierre Rosanvallon * Hegel / Luc Ferry * Jaures / Mona Ozouf * Kant / Luc Ferry * Maistre / Massimo Boffa * Marx / Francois Furet * Michelet / Francois Furet * Quinet / Francois Furet * Stael / Marcel Gauchet * Thine / Mona Ozouf * Tocqueville / Francois Furet * Contributors * Name Index * Subject Index * Alphabetical List of Articles
Les mer
It was a splendid idea to compile a critical dictionary of the French Revolution, and the idea has been splendidly executed… A great work.
A spectacular collection of essays covering virtually every aspect of the French Revolution, written by the most powerful minds currently working on its history. As a whole, the book provides a stunning vindication of the centrality of politics to the lasting significance of the event. Some of the essays--Furet on Quinet, Higonnet on the Sans-culottes, Ozouf on Revolutionary Religion--are miniature masterpieces. The bicentennial is unlikely to produce any other work that serves up so rich and nourishing an intellectual feast. -- Simon Schama, Harvard University This Dictionary represents what I would judge to be one of the most comprehensive statements yet of the new historiography, against Annales; and in so doing, it represents what I would also judge to be one of the clearest interpretations of a renewal of liberal thinking in France which in its distinctiveness, its break from standing conceptions, will be of general interest to all but the most parochial of Anglo-Americans. -- Geoffrey Hawthorn, Cambridge University
Les mer

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9780674177284
Publisert
1989-09-09
Utgiver
Vendor
The Belknap Press
Vekt
1932 gr
Høyde
254 mm
Bredde
171 mm
Aldersnivå
UU, UP, P, 05, 06
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Innbundet
Antall sider
1120

Oversetter

Biographical note

François Furet, former president of the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, is presently director of the Institut Raymond-Aron in Paris and Professor of History and Social Thought at the University of Chicago. Mona Ozouf is Director of Research at the Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris.