French Revolution in Theory

Regular price €109.99
A01=Sophie Wahnich
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Author_Sophie Wahnich
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B06=Owen Glyn-Williams
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Critical Theory
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Emancipation
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French History
French Philosophy
Historiography
Humanism
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Philosophy of History
Political History
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Revolution Studies
softlaunch
Structuralism
Twentieth Century Philosophy

Product details

  • ISBN 9781786616173
  • Weight: 508g
  • Dimensions: 160 x 228mm
  • Publication Date: 04 Mar 2022
  • Publisher: Rowman & Littlefield International
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
  • Language: English
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It is time to re-examine the French Revolution as a political resource. The historiography has so far ignored the question of popular sovereignty and emancipation; instead the Revolution has been vilified as a matrix of totalitarianisms by the liberals and as an ethnocentric phenomenon by postcolonial studies. This book examines why.

More so than historians, it is philosophers that have played the leading role in the portrayal of this major event in French political history. The philosophical quarrels of the 1960s placed the French Revolution at the heart of their debates. The most well-documented among these is the conflict between Jean-Paul Sartre and Claude Lévi-Strauss and subsequently, Michel Foucault.

Do we need an ethics of the history of the French Revolution? Rancière, Derrida, Balibar, Lefort, Robin, and Loraux can help answer this question, in an epistemological approach to history. These successive explorations allow us to move away from a myth of identity and to rediscover a real Revolution, capable of offering Enlightenment and political utility and interrogating what democracy and emancipation mean for us today.