The French revolutionary era produced surprises. Why did the French revolutionaries decriminalize sodomy? How did the Revolution alter fundamental attitudes toward time and progress? How did it change people’s interactions with outdoor spaces and with material objects, from playing cards to holy cards? How did it leave a lasting footprint on personal identity, family relationships, and religious belief? Addressing diverse topics like these, the essays in this volume showcase exciting new research about the revolutionary era. Written to honor the historian Lynn Hunt, the essays rethink our understanding of the French Revolution by exploring three central themes: the multifaceted nature of grassroots politics; the pervasive and personal impact of the Revolution on daily life; and its long-term influence on memory, identity, and sense of self. From the October Days to dechristianization and beyond, the authors probe the precarious invention of democracy, analyze how intimately and intently the French Revolution influenced people’s lives, and examine how it shaped nineteenth-century memory, female religiosity, and political culture. Embracing contingency, diversity of experience and perspective, and the multifarious nature of change, the essays document the power and complexity of the revolutionary era as a lived experience.
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Addressing diverse topics like these, the essays in this volume showcase exciting new research about the revolutionary era. Written to honor the historian Lynn Hunt, the essays rethink our understanding of the French Revolution by exploring three central themes: the multifaceted nature of grassroots politics;
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Introduction: Suzanne Desan and Victoria E. Thompson Chapter 1: Victoria E. Thompson, “A perpetually agitated place: politics in the Tuileries Garden, 1789-1792” Chapter 2: Suzanne Desan, “Military men, violence, and gender in the October Days of 1789” Chapter 3: Jeff Horn, “Dechristianization and Terror in Champagne” Chapter 4: Bryant T. Ragan, “Same-sex sexual relations and the French Revolution: the decriminalization of sodomy in 1789” Chapter 5: William Max Nelson, “Leaping into the future: Enlightenment ideas of progress and French revolutionary time” Chapter 6: Jeff Ravel, “’Plus de rois, de dames, de valets’: playing cards during the French Revolution” Chapter 7: Denise Z. Davidson, “‘Notes et souvenirs ... sur la vie politique de mon père’: memory, mourning, and politics in the revolutionary era” Chapter 8: Jennifer Popiel, “Martyred virgins, embattled women, and mass culture: sentiment and authority in nineteenth-century religious images (1830-60)” Epilogue: Lynn Hunt, “Why the French Revolution continues to matter” Bibliography
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Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781802073812
Publisert
2024-06-11
Utgiver
Vendor
Voltaire Foundation
Høyde
234 mm
Bredde
156 mm
Aldersnivå
00, G, 01
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet

Redaktør

Biographical note

Suzanne Desan is Vilas Distinguished Achievement Professor of History Emerita, University of Wisconsin-Madison. She is the author of The Family on Trial in Revolutionary France and co-editor of The French Revolution in Global Perspective. She is currently writing a book on the October Days in the early French Revolution. Professor Bryant T. Ragan teaches early modern European history and the history of sexuality at The Colorado College. He presently participates on a research team that is developing an interactive website and relational database that focuses on the policing of male sodomy in eighteenth-century Paris (https://coloradocollege.website/phs/). Professor Victoria Thompson is Chair of the School of History and Sociology at the Georgia Institute of Technology. She is completing a book entitled King and Public in the Parisian Royal Square, 1748-89 that examines the relationship between the design, representation, and use of urban space and socio-political transformation.