The Remaking of France
How did the ideals of liberty, equality and fraternity evolve out of the corporate structure of the Old Regime in France? This 1994 study investigates the evolution of a new ideal in polity in 1789 and the reaction of French society to it. Concentrating especially on the restructuring of the administration and judiciary, the author argues that the new political structure created by the constitution of 1791 was the most equitable and participatory national political system in the world. In particular, by the standards of the eighteenth century, the polity enacted by the National Assembly was more inclusive than exclusive, and the Constitution of 1791 was much more of an object of consensus than has been acknowledged. Challenging criticisms of the Assembly and the constitution, The Remaking of France argues that the achievements of the National Assembly deserve greater recognition than they have traditionally received.
- An original and pioneering re-interpretation of key legal and constitutional issues of the French Revolution
- Researched in meticulous detail from archival sources
- One of the most important and original contributions on aspects of the French Revolution to appear from the USA
Product details
September 1994Hardback
9780521454070
292 pages
229 × 152 × 21 mm
0.6kg
Available
Table of Contents
- Preface
- Part I:
- 1. The crisis of the Old Regime
- 2. The formation of the new ideal of the polity
- 3. The achievement of the new ideal of the polity
- 4. The new ideal of the polity reaffirmed
- Part II:
- 5. The reception of the new ideal of the polity
- 6. The realization of the new ideal of the polity
- 7. Rallying to the new ideal of the polity
- Conclusion
- Appendix
- Bibliographical note and list of manuscript sources.