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A Companion to the French Revolution comprises twenty-nine newly-written essays reassessing the origins, development, and impact of this great turning-point in modern history.
Examines the origins, development and impact of the French Revolution
Features original contributions from leading historians, including six essays translated from French.
Presents a wide-ranging overview of current historical debates on the revolution and future directions in scholarship
Gives equally thorough treatment to both causes and outcomes of the French Revolution
The essays range widely across the whole revolutionary era, offering excellent surveys of recent research and suggesting how contemporary historians are redefining the Revolution s historical significance. (H–France)
The Revolution will never be exhausted as a subject of historical interest; this volume is an excellent survey of the current state of research. (Reference Reviews)
Notes on Contributors x
Abbreviations xiv
Introduction xv
Peter McPhee
Part I The Origins and Nature of the Crisis of 1789 1
1 Rethinking the Origins of the French Revolution 3 Peter Campbell
2 The Social and Economic Crisis in France at the End of the Ancien Régime 24 Jean–Pierre Jessenne
3 The Cultural Origins of the French Revolution 42 Sarah Maza
4 France and the Atlantic World 57 Miranda Spieler
Part II Reshaping France, 1789 91 73
5 The Principles of 1789 75 Michael P. Fitzsimmons
6 Reimagining Space and Power 91 Alan Forrest
7 The Case against the King, 1789 93 107 Barry M. Shapiro
Part III Church, State, and War 121
8 The Ancien Régime, Catholic Europe, and the Revolution s Religious Schism 123 Dale Van Kley
9 The Origins and Outcomes of Religious Schism, 1790 99 145 Edward J. Woell
10 A Tale of Two Narratives: The French Revolution in International Context, 1787 93 161 Thomas E. Kaiser
Part IV Contesting the Limits of Revolution 179
11 Whose Revolution? 181 Serge Aberdam
12 Gender, Sexuality, and Political Culture 196 Anne Verjus
13 The Peasantry, Feudalism, and the Environment, 1789 93 212 Noelle Plack
Part V Revolutionary and Counter–Revolutionary Violence 229
14 Urban Crowds, Riot, Utopia, and Massacres, 1789 92 231 Donald Sutherland
15 The Vendée, Chouannerie, and the State, 1791 99 246 Jean–Clément Martin
Part VI Political Choice and Practice 261
16 Friends, Enemies, and the Role of the Individual 263 Marisa Linton
17 Choosing Revolution and Counter–Revolution 278 Peter M. Jones
18 The Course of the Terror, 1793 94 293 David Andress
Part VII Searching for Stability, 1794 99 311
19 The Thermidorian Reaction 313 Laura Mason
20 The Political Culture of the Directory 328 James Livesey
21 The New Security State 343 Howard G. Brown
22 The White Terror: Factions, Reactions, and the Politics of Vengeance 359 Stephen Clay
Part VIII The Revolution in International Perspective 379
23 The International Repercussions of the French Revolution 381 Mike Rapport
24 Slavery and the Colonies 397 Frédéric Régent
25 The Revolutionary Mediterranean 419 Ian Coller
Part IX Change and Continuity in France 435
26 A Revolution in Political Culture 437 Isser Woloch
27 The Economy, Society, and the Environment 454 Peter McPhee
28 The French Revolution and the Family 470 Suzanne Desan
29 The Revolution in History, Commemoration, and Memory 486 Pascal Dupuy
Index 503
Peter McPhee is Professorial Fellow at the University of Melbourne. His publications include
Living the French Revolution 1789–1799 (2006) and
Robespierre: a Revolutionary Life (2012). A Fellow of the Australian Academy of the Humanities and the Academy of Social Sciences, McPhee was made a Member of the Order of Australia in 2012 for service to education and the discipline of history.
The French Revolution is one of the great turning–points in modern history. Never before had the people of a large and populous country sought to remake their society on the basis of the principles of popular sovereignty and civic equality. The drama, success, and tragedy of their project, and of the attempts to arrest or reverse it, have attracted scholarly debate for more than two centuries.
So why was there a Revolution in 1789? Why did it prove so difficult to stabilize the new regime? What factors caused the Revolution to take its particular course? And what were the consequences, domestic and abroad, of a decade of revolutionary change? Featuring contributions from an international cast of acclaimed historians, A Companion to the French Revolution addresses these and other critical questions as it points the way to future scholarship.