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From Jacobin to liberal : Marc-Antoine Jullien, 1775-1848 / edited and translated by R.R. Palmer.

De Gruyter Princeton University Press eBook Package Archive 1927-1999 Available online

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Format:
Book
Author/Creator:
Jullien, Marc-Antoine, 1775-1848.
Contributor:
Palmer, R. R. (Robert Roswell), 1909-2002.
Standardized Title:
Selections. English. 1993
Language:
English
Subjects (All):
Revolutionaries--France--Biography.
Revolutionaries.
Authors, French--19th century--Biography.
Authors, French.
Industries--France--History--19th century--Sources.
Industries.
Liberalism--France--History--19th century--Sources.
Liberalism.
France--History--Revolution, 1789-1799--Sources.
France.
Jullien, Marc-Antoine, 1775-1848.
Jullien, Marc-Antoine.
Physical Description:
1 online resource (x, 243 pages)
Edition:
Core Textbook
Place of Publication:
Princeton, N.J. : Princeton University Press, c1993.
Language Note:
English
Summary:
For this book R. R. Palmer has translated selections from the abundant writings of the versatile French political figure and writer Marc-Antoine Jullien, weaving them together with his own extensive commentary into an absorbing narrative of Jullien's life and times. Jullien's hopes and fears for the "progress of humanity" were typical of many of the French bourgeoisie in this turbulent period. His life coincided with the whole era of revolution in Europe and the Americas from 1775 to 1848: he was born in the year when armed rebellion against Britain began in America, he witnessed the fall of the Bastille as a schoolboy in Paris, joined the Jacobin club, took part in the Reign of Terror, advocated democracy, put his hopes in Napoleon Bonaparte, turned against him, and then welcomed his return from Elba. Under the restored Bourbons, he became an outspoken liberal, rejoiced in the revolution of 1830, had doubts about the July monarchy, welcomed the revolution of 1848, and died a few weeks before the election of Louis-Napoleon Bonaparte as president of the Second Republic. Drawn from books, pamphlets, reports, letters, book reviews, magazine articles, poems, and private notes and memoranda, Jullien's comments are supplemented here by letters that his mother wrote during the early years of the French Revolution and by articles by Jullien's collaborators in the Revue Encyclopédique. In Palmer's skilled hands, these selected materials from a now forgotten life vividly portray France's transition from revolutionary republicanism and the Terror through the Napoleonic years to the more placid liberalism of the nineteenth century.
Contents:
Front matter
CONTENTS
PREFACE
ONE. A Boy and His Parents in the French Revolution
TWO. Young Agent of the Terror
THREE. Democrat among the "Anarchists"
FOUR. Bonaparte-Italy-Egypt-Naples
FIVE. For and Against Napoleon
SIX. The Hundred Days
SEVEN. Constitutional Monarchist
EIGHT. Theorist of Education
NINE. Apostle of Civilization
TEN. The Later Years
REFERENCES
INDEX
Notes:
A selection of writings by Marc-Antoine Jullien translated from the French.
Includes bibliographical references (p. [227]-240) and index.
ISBN:
9786612751769
9781282751767
128275176X
9781400821013
1400821010
9781400812936
1400812933
OCLC:
700688298

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