The French Revolution in Culture and Society
This volume examines the issue of the timing of cultural change, problems of Revolutionary anticipations and reverberations, and the relationship between culture, politics, and society. Individual essays combine both old and new approaches, ranging from textual analysis to the study of local judicial records, from the psychohistorical to the demographic. But they all demonstrate the usefulness of linking social and cultural history, broadly conceived, and of interdisciplinary approaches to the study of events.

Part One addresses directly the creation of French Revolutionary culture. The contributors describe the physical act of dismantling and redefining the culture of the Ancien Regime for revolutionary purposes, new conceptions of time, and generation relations in Revolutionary rhetoric and law. The second part identifies key cultural ingredients from the distant past. It reminds us of the extent to which the Revolution employed the huge storehouse of Western culture to create something original. Because the creation of a democratic culture implies a crisis of consciousness, Part Three brings together a range of investigations into the question of cultural crisis. Three essays see the Revolutionary era as engendering psychological dislocation. In Part Four, social historians reveal the variety of approaches they have taken in trying to understand eighteenth century France. The varied contributions exploit the sources that have become the stock-in-trade of modern social history. Poverty, crime, and population are among the leading topics in current historiography, but military and political institutions are also examined in new ways. This edited collection provides new insights into a critical period of world history and will be welcomed by all scholars of the French Revolution and its aftermath.

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The French Revolution in Culture and Society
This volume examines the issue of the timing of cultural change, problems of Revolutionary anticipations and reverberations, and the relationship between culture, politics, and society. Individual essays combine both old and new approaches, ranging from textual analysis to the study of local judicial records, from the psychohistorical to the demographic. But they all demonstrate the usefulness of linking social and cultural history, broadly conceived, and of interdisciplinary approaches to the study of events.

Part One addresses directly the creation of French Revolutionary culture. The contributors describe the physical act of dismantling and redefining the culture of the Ancien Regime for revolutionary purposes, new conceptions of time, and generation relations in Revolutionary rhetoric and law. The second part identifies key cultural ingredients from the distant past. It reminds us of the extent to which the Revolution employed the huge storehouse of Western culture to create something original. Because the creation of a democratic culture implies a crisis of consciousness, Part Three brings together a range of investigations into the question of cultural crisis. Three essays see the Revolutionary era as engendering psychological dislocation. In Part Four, social historians reveal the variety of approaches they have taken in trying to understand eighteenth century France. The varied contributions exploit the sources that have become the stock-in-trade of modern social history. Poverty, crime, and population are among the leading topics in current historiography, but military and political institutions are also examined in new ways. This edited collection provides new insights into a critical period of world history and will be welcomed by all scholars of the French Revolution and its aftermath.

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The French Revolution in Culture and Society

The French Revolution in Culture and Society

The French Revolution in Culture and Society

The French Revolution in Culture and Society

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Overview

This volume examines the issue of the timing of cultural change, problems of Revolutionary anticipations and reverberations, and the relationship between culture, politics, and society. Individual essays combine both old and new approaches, ranging from textual analysis to the study of local judicial records, from the psychohistorical to the demographic. But they all demonstrate the usefulness of linking social and cultural history, broadly conceived, and of interdisciplinary approaches to the study of events.

Part One addresses directly the creation of French Revolutionary culture. The contributors describe the physical act of dismantling and redefining the culture of the Ancien Regime for revolutionary purposes, new conceptions of time, and generation relations in Revolutionary rhetoric and law. The second part identifies key cultural ingredients from the distant past. It reminds us of the extent to which the Revolution employed the huge storehouse of Western culture to create something original. Because the creation of a democratic culture implies a crisis of consciousness, Part Three brings together a range of investigations into the question of cultural crisis. Three essays see the Revolutionary era as engendering psychological dislocation. In Part Four, social historians reveal the variety of approaches they have taken in trying to understand eighteenth century France. The varied contributions exploit the sources that have become the stock-in-trade of modern social history. Poverty, crime, and population are among the leading topics in current historiography, but military and political institutions are also examined in new ways. This edited collection provides new insights into a critical period of world history and will be welcomed by all scholars of the French Revolution and its aftermath.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780313274282
Publisher: Bloomsbury Academic
Publication date: 05/30/1991
Series: Contributions to the Study of World History , #23
Pages: 240
Product dimensions: 6.14(w) x 9.21(h) x 0.56(d)
Lexile: 1410L (what's this?)

About the Author

DAVID G. TROYANSKY is an Associate Professor of history at Texas Tech University. He is author of Old Age in the Old Regime: Image and Experience in Eighteenth-Century France and contributed several sections to Historical Dictionary of the Third French Republic (Greenwood Press, 1986). He is presently working on future books about generations in French history and culture in revolutionary Alsace.

ALFRED CISMARU is a Professor of Romance languages at Texas Tech University. He is currently writing articles on Ionesco and Beckett, and a book on Shakespeare's presence in French twentieth-century theatre.

NORWOOD ANDREWS, JR. is a Professor of Romance languages at Texas Tech University. Specializing in Portuguese, Brazilian, and comparative literature, he is now working on a forthcoming book entitled Camoes among American Authors, A Preliminary Directory.

Table of Contents

Preface by Norwood Andrews, Jr. and Alfred Cismaru
Introduction by David G. Troyansky
Creating a Revolutionary Culture
The King's Two Bodies: Monuments, Mausoleums, and Museums of the French Revolution by Emmet Kennedy
Gilbert Romme and the Making of the French Republican Calendar by James Friguglietti
Generational Discourse in the French Revolution by David G. Troyansky
Ingredients from the Distant Past
History Recreated or Malfunctioned Desire? The Roman Republic Re-membered in the French Revolution by David H. J. Larmour
Ecclesiological Insights at the 1790 National Assembly: An Assessment of the Contribution of Catholic Thought to the French Revolution by Roland G. Bonnel
Revolutionary Politics and Revolutionary Culture: Shakespeare in France, 1789-1815 by Matthew Ramsey
Crisis in Culture: Pre- and Postrevolutionary
La Faute à Figaro? by Jean-Yves Guérin
Gothic Sexuality and Social Decay in Diderot and Sade by Susan B. Grayson
Romanticism and the Revolution of 1789: A Psychohistorical View by Rudolph Binion
Gender-rising the Revolution: La Duchesse de Langeais by Carl D. Weiner
The Social Context of Cultural Revolution
The French Army's Budget in the Eighteenth Century: A Retreat from Loyalty by Claude C. Sturgill
Change, Continuity, and the French Revolution: Elite Discourse on Mendicity, 1750-1815 by William J. Olejniczak
Ancien Régime Justice and the Revolution: A Local Study by Julius R. Ruff
Ritualized Violence in Eighteenth-Century Périgord by Steven G. Reinhardt
Political Revolution and Contraceptive Revolution by Jean-Pierre Bardet
Bibliography
Index

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