A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution

Front Cover
François Furet, Mona Ozouf
Harvard University Press, 1989 - History - 1063 pages

Two centuries later, the French Revolution--that extraordinary event that founded modern democracy--continues to give rise to a reevaluation of essential questions. The ambition of this magnificent volume is not only to present the reader with the research of a wide range of international scholars on those questions, but also to bring one into the heart of the issues still under lively debate.

Its form is as original as its goal: neither dictionary, in the traditional sense of the word, nor encyclopedia, it is deliberately limited to some ninety-nine entries organized alphabetically by key words and themes under five major headings: events, including the Estates General and the Terror; actors, such as Marie Antoinette, Marat, and Napoleon Bonaparte; institutions and creations, among them Revolutionary Calendar and Suffrage; ideas, covering, for example, Ancien R gime, the American Revolution, and Liberty; and historians and commentators, from Hegel to Tocqueville. In addition, there are synoptic indexes of names and themes that give the reader easy access to the entire volume as well as a key to its profound coherence.

What unifies all the varied topics brought together in this dictionary is their authors' effort to be "critical." As such, the book rejects the dogmatism of closed systems and definitive interpretations. Its aim is less to make a complete inventory of the findings of the history of the French Revolution than to take stock of what remains problematical about those findings; this work thus offers the additional special quality of incorporating the rich historiographical literature unceasingly elaborated since 1789.

With A Critical Dictionary of the French Revolution, Fran ois Furet and Mona Ozouf invite the reader to recross the first two centuries of French democracy in order to gain a better understanding of the origins of the world in which we live today.

 

Contents

DeChristianization Mona Ozouf
20
Elections Patrice Gueniffey
33
Federalism Mona Ozouf
54
Great Fear Jacques Revel
74
Kings Trial Mona Ozouf
95
Night of August 4 François Furet
107
Revolutionary Journées Denis Richet
124
Terror François Furet
137
Aristocracy David D Bien
616
Centralization Yann Fauchois
629
Democracy Philippe Raynaud
649
Equality Mona Ozouf
669
Feudal System François Furet
684
Jacobinism François Furet
704
Montesquieu Bernard Manin
728
Nation Pierre Nora
742

Treaties of Basel and The Hague Denis Richet
151
Vendée François Furet
165
Individuals
179
Carnot Patrice Gueniffey
197
Patrice Gueniffey
224
Mona Ozouf
244
François Furet
265
Napoleon Bonaparte
273
Marcel Gauchet
287
Baker
313
Massimo Boffa
324
Denis Richet
337
Ran Halévi
343
Mona Ozouf
351
Denis Richet
363
Ran Halévi
370
Mona Ozouf
380
Patrice Higonnet
393
Bronislaw Baczko
412
Assignats
426
Civil Code
437
Joseph
448
Clubs and Popular Societies
458
Committee of Public Safety
474
Département
494
Maximum
504
National Properties Louis Bergeron
511
Revolutionary Assemblies Denis Richet
529
Revolutionary Government François Furet
548
Suffrage Patrice Gueniffey
571
American Revolution Philippe Raynaud
593
Natural Borders Denis Richet
754
Public Spirit Mona Ozouf
779
Republic Pierre Nora
792
Revolution Mona Ozouf
806
Rousseau Bernard Manin
829
Sovereignty Keith M Baker
844
Vandalism Bronislaw Baczko
860
Baker
869
HISTORIANS AND COMMENTATORS
879
Blanc
900
Burke
916
Constant
924
Fichte
933
Hegel
945
Jaurès Mona Ozouf
950
Kant
960
Maistre
965
Marx
972
Michelet
980
Quinet
992
Staël Marcel Gauchet
1003
Staël
1004
Taine
1012
Tocqueville François Furet
1021
Tocqueville
1022
Contributors
1034
Contributors
1035
Subject Index
1056
Alphabetical List of Articles
1063
Copyright

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About the author (1989)

François Furet, former president of the École des Hautes Études en Sciences Sociales, is presently director of the Institut Raymond-Aron in Paris and Professor of History and Social Thought at the University of Chicago. Mona Ozouf is Director of Research at the Centre Nationale de la Recherche Scientifique, Paris.

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