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Rousseau and the French Revolution 1762-1791: Bloomsbury Academic Collections: Philosophy

Autor Joan McDonald
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 noi 2013
From 1789 onwards there sprang up a fervent revolutionary cult of Rousseau, and at each stage in the subsequent unfolding of the drama of the Revolution historians have seen Rousseau's influence at work. Mrs McDonald seeks in this study to trace the development of the cult and to define the nature of the influence by means of a detailed survey of the appeals made to the authority of Rousseau in books, pamphlets and accounts of speeches put forth by revolutionary and counter-revolutionary writers between 1762 and 1791, and she reaches conclusions more complex than those which have been commonly accepted. She is able to show that most of the writers on the revolutionary side who invoked Rousseau's name did so in order to put forward their own views and used arguments that were often in direct contradiction with those which he had formulated; the Social Contract was not widely read in these years, and those revolutionaries who did actually study it were often critical of what they found there. By contrast, the most careful analysis of Rousseau's political theory is to be found in the pamphlets written by aristocratic critics of the Revolution in protest against the misuse to which his name had been put.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9781472513892
ISBN-10: 1472513894
Pagini: 190
Dimensiuni: 156 x 234 x 13 mm
Greutate: 0.47 kg
Editura: Bloomsbury Publishing
Colecția Bloomsbury Academic
Seria Bloomsbury Academic Collections: Philosophy

Locul publicării:London, United Kingdom

Cuprins

AbbreviationsPart I: The Problem of InterpretationI. Introduction: the DifficultiesII. Earlier Historical InterpretationsIII. Rousseau and the Revolutionary StatePart II: The Revolutionary RousseauIV. The Study of Rousseau's Political Theory, 1762-88V. The Appeal to Rousseau's Authority and Rousseauist Literature, 1788-91VI. The Exposition of Rousseau's Political Theory, 1788-91VII. The Revolutionary Theory of SovereigntyVIII. The Critics of the Social ContractPart III: The Counter-Revolutionary RousseauIX. The Counter-Revolutionary Appeal to RousseauX. The Attack on the AssemblyXI. The Defence of the MonarchyPart IV: ConclusionXII. The Revolutionary Cult of RousseauBibliographyIndex