People’s Justice

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A01=Carla Hesse
Author_Carla Hesse
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Citizens
Civic
Committee
Committee safety
Committee security
Commune
Conviction
Counter revolution
Counter revolutionary
Courtroom
Couthon
Crimes
Criminal
Criminal courts
Criminal justice
Criminal tribunals
Danton
Decree
Defendants
Deputies
Detention
Enemies
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eq_history
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eq_isMigrated=2
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eq_non-fiction
Evidence
Exceptional
Exceptional jurisdictions
Executive power
forthcoming
Fouquier
Fouquier tinville
Girondins
Indict
Indictment
Innocence
Jacobin
Judicial
Jurisdictions
Jurisprudence
Jurors
Jury
Legislative
Legitimacy
Louis
Marat
Material evidence
Military
Monarchy
Oral testimony
Penal
Penal code
Prairial
Prairial laws
Preliminary investigation
Prosecutor
Republican
Revolution
Revolutionary
Revolutionary government
Revolutionary justice
Revolutionary law
Revolutionary tribunal
Rhetorical
Robespierre
Sovereign
Sovereignty
Surveillance
Suspicion
Suspicious persons
Tinville
Treason
Trial
Tribunal

Product details

  • ISBN 9780691274843
  • Dimensions: 156 x 235mm
  • Publication Date: 28 Jul 2026
  • Publisher: Princeton University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A major new interpretation of the French Revolution that brings to life the criminal tribunals at the heart of the Republic’s political culture

In The People’s Justice, Carla Hesse offers a sweeping reappraisal of political violence in the French Revolution. From Charles Dickens to Hannah Arendt, the Revolution of 1789–1799 in France has been depicted as the bloodiest of the eighteenth-century democratic revolutions. Through extensive new archival research, Hesse shows that, to the contrary, what set the French Revolution apart was neither the scale nor the intensity of its violence but rather the ubiquity of its political tribunals and the use of novel forms of criminal law and procedure as a means of adjudicating political conflict.

More than 5,000 political trials were prosecuted by the Revolutionary Tribunal in Paris alone, and, with an acquittal rate of more than 50 percent, these were neither perfunctory nor foregone in their outcomes. They had a repressive function, to be sure, but more importantly, they played a critical role in founding a republic in France and in shaping its social and political norms. Through jury deliberation, public witnessing, and media coverage, these political trials legitimated a republic and the revolutionary struggle that brought it into being. They were animated less by class warfare, factional hatreds, or utopian ideology than by a patriotic, albeit tragic, effort to hold fellow citizens accountable. Over the course of the last two centuries, France, of course, has successfully established itself as a constitutional regime, but this constitutional tradition is still rooted in and haunted by its revolutionary past. Since 1793, the French Republic has, to some extent or another, kept itself alive by keeping itself perpetually on trial.

Carla Hesse is the Peder Sather Professor of History at the University of California, Berkeley. She is the author of The Other Enlightenment: How French Women Became Modern (Princeton) and Publishing and Cultural Politics in Revolutionary Paris, 1789–1810.

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