
Renowned historian, essayist, and journalist David A. Bell has long made France and its history the subject of his scholarly gaze and the object of his enduring affection. Shadows of Revolution: Reflections on France, Past and Present gathers together his writing, composed over a period of more than 25 years, into a single volume. As the title of this collection suggests, Bell views much of French history through the lens of the Revolutionary era. Within a space of a dozen years, from Bastille to Bonaparte, the country experimented with and experienced every form of governance, creating in the process, as Bell puts it, "the most intense political laboratory the world had ever known." The Revolution remains the country's defining era, delineating its sense of identity and overshadowing the events that followed it. Yet another, Bell argues, is the Vichy period and World War Two-France's dark night of the soul-with whose legacies the country continues to contend. These two moments of violent and transformative upheaval may dominate French history, but as this collection and Bell's observational powers reveal, the full range of topics involving France is endlessly rich and diverse. Divided into eight sections, it connects France's education to its national identity, the Enlightenment to the Revolution and human rights, Napoleon to Victor Hugo, and nineteenth-century anti-Semitism to such recent events such as the riots of 2006, the Arab Spring, and the Charlie Hebdo tragedy. Shadows of Revolution embodies and reflects the endlessly fascinating and entertaining complexity of French history, and shows the ways in which it has shaped world history.
How do the transformative events of the French Revolution and the Vichy era continue to define the modern French national identity and political landscape? David A. Bell, a distinguished historian and journalist, utilizes over two decades of scholarly essays to examine the persistent influence of historical trauma and political experimentation on contemporary France. He argues that the nation functions as a perpetual political laboratory, where the legacies of the Enlightenment, the Napoleonic era, and the Second World War remain active forces in shaping current societal debates and international relations.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Experts recognize this collection as a sophisticated synthesis of long-term historical trends and modern political analysis. Readers frequently note the accessibility of Bell's prose, which balances academic rigor with the observational clarity of a seasoned journalist.
Page Count:
456
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190262702
ISBN-13:
9780190262709
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