French society in revolution 1789-1799.
Editorial MANCHESTER UNIVERSITY PRESS
España peninsular
In recent years historians have been drawn to the political culture of dictatorial violence during the French Revolution, at the expense of recognising the profound liberation and ultimate social transformation that the period represented for the Fre...
Leer más...- Editorial MANCHESTER UNIVERSITY PRESS
- ISBN13 9780719051913
- ISBN10 0719051916
- Tipo LIBRO
- Encuadernación Rústica
Materias
Historia Moderna UniversalFrench society in revolution 1789-1799.
Editorial MANCHESTER UNIVERSITY PRESS
In recent years historians have been drawn to the political culture of dictatorial violence during the French Revolution, at the expense of recognising the profound liberation and ultimate social transformation that the period represented for the Fre...
España peninsular
Detalles del libro
In recent years historians have been drawn to the political culture of dictatorial violence during the French Revolution, at the expense of recognising the profound liberation and ultimate social transformation that the period represented for the French people. French Society In Revolution aims to retrieve the social history of the 1790s from this unjustified neglect.
This study plots narrative course through a turbulent time, examining both the structural and cultural elements behind the breakdown of the eighteenth-century monarchic state and its aristocratic social system. Engaging with the latest historical research, it presents a picture of the tensions evolving in this system, and tracks elements of conflict throughout the revolutionary decade. The limitations and failings of revolutionary attempts at liberation are confronted, particularly in the fields of gender and the treatment of poverty, and the beliefs and situations that hindered efforts to create a genuine political community are analysed.
The Revolution is firmly acknowledged as failing, within its own time, to fulfill its goals, but the continual attempts by counter-revolutionaries to destroy it must be recalled as part of the explanation for this. Ultimately, the Revolution is seen as having long-term benefits for the French population, and for European society.