Writer's Lot

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A01=Robert Darnton
ancien regime
ancien regime literature
Anthony Grafton The Footnote
Author_Robert Darnton
authorship history
book history
book trade
Bourbon monarchy
Category=DSBD
Category=NH
Category=NHB
Category=NHD
Category=NHTB
Category=NHTR
Category=NHTV
censorship
cultural politics
cultural revolution
cultural transformation
Darrin McMahon Enemies of the Enlightenment
eighteenth-century France
Enlightenment
enlightenment thought
enlightenment writers
eq_bestseller
eq_biography-true-stories
eq_history
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
french intellectual history
french literary history
French Revolution
Grub Street
intellectual history
intellectual life
Jacobins
literary biography
literary careers
literary culture
literary economy
literary profession
literary sociology
literary underground
Lynn Hunt Inventing Human Rights
manuscripts
patronage
Peter Gay The Enlightenment
police reports
political influence
political writing
pre-revolutionary france
print culture
public opinion
publishing
Republic of Letters
revolutionary ideas
revolutionary literature
Robert Darnton The Forbidden Best-Sellers of Pre-Revolutionary France
Roger Chartier The Order of Books
Rousseau
salons
social history
social inequality
social order
state surveillance
Voltaire
writers

Product details

  • ISBN 9780674299887
  • Weight: 410g
  • Dimensions: 140 x 210mm
  • Publication Date: 13 May 2025
  • Publisher: Harvard University Press
  • Publication City/Country: US
  • Product Form: Hardback
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A pioneering social history of French writers during the Age of Revolution, from a world-renowned scholar and National Book Critics Circle Award winner.

In eighteenth-century France, writers emerged as a new kind of power. They stirred passions, shaped public opinion, and helped topple the Bourbon monarchy. Whether scribbling in dreary garrets or philosophizing in salons, they exerted so much influence that the state kept them under constant surveillance. A few became celebrities, but most were hacks, and none could survive without patrons or second jobs.

The Writer’s Lot is the first book to move beyond individual biography to take the measure of “literary France” as a whole. Historian Robert Darnton parses forgotten letters, manuscripts, police reports, private diaries, and newspapers to show how writers made careers and how they fit into the social order—or didn’t. Reassessing long-standing narratives of the French Revolution, Darnton shows that to be a reject was not necessarily to be a Jacobin: the toilers of the Parisian Grub Street sold their words to revolutionary publishers and government ministers alike. And while literary France contributed to the downfall of the ancien régime, it did so through its example more than its ideals: the contradiction inherent in the Republic of Letters—in theory, open to all; in practice, dominated by a well-connected clique—dramatized the oppressiveness of the French social system.

Darnton brings his trademark rigor and investigative eye to the character of literary France, from the culture war that pitted the “decadent” Voltaire against the “radical” Rousseau to struggling scribblers, booksellers, censors, printers, and royal spies. Their lives, little understood until now, afford rare insight into the ferment of French society during the Age of Revolution.

Robert Darnton is the author of numerous award-winning books on French cultural history, including The Revolutionary Temper. A MacArthur Fellow, chevalier in the Légion d’honneur, and winner of the National Humanities Medal and the National Book Critics Circle Award, Darnton is the Carl H. Pforzheimer University Professor and Director of the University Library, Emeritus, at Harvard University.

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