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Non-violence and the French Revolution : political demonstrations in Paris, 1787-1795 /

"Historians of the French Revolution have traditionally emphasised the centrality of violence to revolutionary protest. However, Micah Alpaugh reveals instead the surprising prevalence of non-violent tactics to demonstrate that much of the popular action taken in revolutionary Paris was not in...

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Detalles Bibliográficos
Clasificación:Libro Electrónico
Autor principal: Alpaugh, Micah (Autor)
Formato: Electrónico eBook
Idioma:Inglés
Publicado: Cambridge ; New York : Cambridge University Press, 2015.
Temas:
Acceso en línea:Texto completo
Tabla de Contenidos:
  • Cover; Half-title; Title page; Copyright information; Table of contents; List of tables; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Historiography: political demonstrations, French Revolutionary protest, and the presumption of violence; Non-violence, violence, and French Revolutionary protest; Approach: sources and organization; 1. Marching in Paris from the Old Regime to the Revolution; Eighteenth-century processional marches and the origins of the Revolutionary political demonstration; Police, political demonstrations, and pre-Revolutionary protest; Conclusion.
  • 2. Political demonstrations and the politics of escalation in 1789Spring 1789, Réveillon, and the coming of Revolutionary protest; From Palais-Royal sociability to the rupture of the Bastille Days; Women, men, and the making of the October Days; Conclusion; 3. From rapprochement to radicalism, 1790-1791; Revolutionary commemoration and the rediscovery of mass-movement; Political demonstrations and Parisian radicalization, September 1790-June 1791; Peaceful protest and the republican cause, June-July 1791; Conclusion; 4. War, collaborative protest, and the 1792 republican movement.
  • Spring 1792: marching campaigns and the rise of the sectionsJune 20, 1792: the mechanics of the Revolutionary political demonstration; Radical collaborations and the insurrection of August 10; Conclusion; 5. Fraternal protest in a time of terror, August 1792
  • September 1793; Sans-culottes in national politics, August 1792-April 1793; Insurrections without bloodshed: May 31-June 2 and September 4-5, 1793; Conclusion; 6. Reasserting collective action, 1794-1795; Year II to Germinal: the rebirth of the political demonstration; Reaction and repression: Germinal to Prairial; Conclusion.
  • 7. Moderate and conservative marches in Revolutionary ParisThe increasingly contentious history of the religious procession; The Muscadins: contestations of the jeunesse dorée, 1793-1795; Right-wing opposition and the final insurrection of Vendémiaire; Conclusion; Conclusion; Appendix Parisian protests, 1787-1795; Bibliography; Primary sources; Archives; Manuscripts; Archives municipales d'Amiens; Archives municipales de Marseille; Bibliothèque de l'Assemblée nationale, Paris; Bibliothèque historique de la ville de Paris; Bibliothèque municipale d'Amiens; Bibliothèque municipale d'Auch.
  • Bibliothèque municipale d'AvignonBibliothèque municipale de Clermont-Ferrand; Bibliothèque municipale de Lyon; Bibliothèque municipale de Marseille; Bibliothèque municipale d'Orléans; Bibliothèque municipale de Poitiers; Bibliothèque municipale de Versailles; Bibliothèque nationale François Mitterrand, Paris; Bibliothèque nationale
  • Richelieu, Paris; British Library, London; John Rylands Library, Manchester; Newspapers; Books, pamphlets and published documents; Secondary works; Index.