The Paris Commune: A Global History

Author:   Quentin Deluermoz
Publisher:   Verso Books
Edition:   Paperback original
ISBN:  

9781839768187


Pages:   448
Publication Date:   26 May 2026
Format:   Paperback
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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The Paris Commune: A Global History


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Author:   Quentin Deluermoz
Publisher:   Verso Books
Imprint:   Verso Books
Edition:   Paperback original
Dimensions:   Width: 15.30cm , Height: 2.80cm , Length: 23.40cm
Weight:   0.495kg
ISBN:  

9781839768187


ISBN 10:   1839768185
Pages:   448
Publication Date:   26 May 2026
Audience:   General/trade ,  College/higher education ,  Professional and scholarly ,  General ,  Tertiary & Higher Education
Format:   Paperback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Not yet available   Availability explained
This item is yet to be released. You can pre-order this item and we will dispatch it to you upon its release.

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Reviews

Deluermoz's exploration of the Commune - in its Parisian core and in its national, European, and global reverberations - expands our knowledge of a history we thought we knew. Based on meticulous and widespread archival research, above all in French national and provincial archives, but also in Great Britain, Spain, and the United States, the book is both empirically rich and theoretically alert. Original in conception, generous in spirit, written with care and passion, this is an important contribution to French and transnational history. -- William Sewell Jr * Journal of Modern History * Quentin Deluermoz's superb new book represents the most original contribution yet to rethink the place of the Commune in the global history of the nineteenth century. His study seeks to explain how this short-lived experiment of just seventy-two days fits into broader trends and processes, both in its origins-with strong roots in the transnational activism of 1848, the remaking of urban space, the socialist dream of workers' self-government-but also its reception. -- Thomas Stammers * Nineteenth-Century French Studies * In my view, this is the fullest account of the Paris Commune, and other Communes. This is an extremely impressive study of true significance. -- John Merriman, Yale University A remarkable book-one of the most important to be published in many years on the famous Paris Commune and the other, less famous revolutionary Communes that together constituted one of the most important global events of the second half of the nineteenth century. -- David Bell, Princeton University A remarkable example of how modern European and global history can come into engagement. His aim is as much to show how using the comparative and connective techniques of global history we can produce a more complex kind of engagement with local historical phenomena, as it is simply to understand the commune. And it is for this reason that it will become a major work of reference for historians working on other questions. There is nothing like this in English. -- Richard Drayton, King’s College London In providing this multi-perspective account of the event, this book brings into salience the different dimensions that constitute the time-space of the Paris insurrection. -- Ivan Ermakoff, University of Madison In the midst of so many printed pages, one book in particular stands out for the originality of its interpretation and the depth of its proposals: the one Quentin Deluermoz has devoted to the analysis of that revolution of 1870-1871. An impeccably effective example of the potential of ""l'histoire événementielle"", which is regaining its strength. -- Jorge Myers * Prismas - Revista De Historia Intelectual * Quentin Deluermoz has written a book that brings together everything that has been written about the many revolutions of 1870-1871, and anticipates everything that will be written about them in the years to come. -- Albert Garcia Balana * Revue d’histoire du 19e siècle * Deluermoz's book offers a new interpretation of the Paris Commune, one that goes beyond traditional Franco-French interpretations of events and chronologies. -- Jean-Louis Robert * Revue d’histoire moderne & contemporaine * If the idea of an interpretation of the event and its repercussions ""at the ground level,"" as Deluermoz describes his approach, accurately describes his remarkable archival work and his emphasis on the lived experience of the Commune, his broad geographic and interpretive scope, as well as his rich historical and theoretical interrogations, are just as striking. Scholarship on the Commune will be enriched by this original and rigorous book. This ""crossing of nineteenth-century worlds"", to quote its subtitle, keeps its promise, offering a chronological and spatial exploration of the second half of the nineteenth century and the transnational character of revolutions. * La Vie des Idées * This is a hugely ambitious, exhaustively researched, and enjoyable book. Its arguments are clear and persuasive and it makes a valuable addition to the historiographies of the Paris Commune, modern France, and global radicalism. -- Julia Nicholls * Francia-Recensio *


Deluermoz's exploration of the Commune - in its Parisian core and in its national, European, and global reverberations - expands our knowledge of a history we thought we knew. Based on meticulous and widespread archival research, above all in French national and provincial archives, but also in Great Britain, Spain, and the United States, the book is both empirically rich and theoretically alert. Original in conception, generous in spirit, written with care and passion, this is an important contribution to French and transnational history. -- William Sewell Jr * Journal of Modern History * Quentin Deluermoz's superb new book represents the most original contribution yet to rethink the place of the Commune in the global history of the nineteenth century. His study seeks to explain how this short-lived experiment of just seventy-two days fits into broader trends and processes, both in its origins-with strong roots in the transnational activism of 1848, the remaking of urban space, the socialist dream of workers' self-government-but also its reception. -- Thomas Stammer * Nineteenth-Century French Studies * In my view, this is the fullest account of the Paris Commune, and other Communes. This is an extremely impressive study of true significance. -- John Merriman, Yale University A remarkable book-one of the most important to be published in many years on the famous Paris Commune and the other, less famous revolutionary Communes that together constituted one of the most important global events of the second half of the nineteenth century. -- David Bell, Princeton University A remarkable example of how modern European and global history can come into engagement. His aim is as much to show how using the comparative and connective techniques of global history we can produce a more complex kind of engagement with local historical phenomena, as it is simply to understand the commune. And it is for this reason that it will become a major work of reference for historians working on other questions. There is nothing like this in English. -- Richard Drayton, King’s College London In providing this multi-perspective account of the event, this book brings into salience the different dimensions that constitute the time-space of the Paris insurrection. -- Ivan Ermakoff, University of Madison In the midst of so many printed pages, one book in particular stands out for the originality of its interpretation and the depth of its proposals: the one Quentin Deluermoz has devoted to the analysis of that revolution of 1870-1871. An impeccably effective example of the potential of ""l'histoire événementielle"", which is regaining its strength. -- Jorge Myers * Prismas - Revista De Historia Intelectual * Quentin Deluermoz has written a book that brings together everything that has been written about the many revolutions of 1870-1871, and anticipates everything that will be written about them in the years to come. -- Albert Garcia Balana * Revue d’histoire du 19e siècle * Deluermoz's book offers a new interpretation of the Paris Commune, one that goes beyond traditional Franco-French interpretations of events and chronologies. -- Jean-Louis Robert * Revue d’histoire moderne & contemporaine * If the idea of an interpretation of the event and its repercussions ""at the ground level,"" as Deluermoz describes his approach, accurately describes his remarkable archival work and his emphasis on the lived experience of the Commune, his broad geographic and interpretive scope, as well as his rich historical and theoretical interrogations, are just as striking. Scholarship on the Commune will be enriched by this original and rigorous book. This ""crossing of nineteenth-century worlds"", to quote its subtitle, keeps its promise, offering a chronological and spatial exploration of the second half of the nineteenth century and the transnational character of revolutions. * La Vie des Idées * This is a hugely ambitious, exhaustively researched, and enjoyable book. Its arguments are clear and persuasive and it makes a valuable addition to the historiographies of the Paris Commune, modern France, and global radicalism. -- Julia Nicholls * Francia-Recensio *


Author Information

Quentin Deluermoz is Professor of contemporary History at University Paris Cité (France). He is the author and editor of more than 15 books, translated in Spanish and English, including.(with P. Singaravelou), A Past of Possibilities : a History of what it could have been, Yale UP, 2021 ; Le Crépuscule des révolutions, 1848-1871 (Seuil, 2014) ; Histoires globales des révolutions (with L. Bantigny, L. Jeanpierre, B. Gobille, E. Palieraki, La Découverte, 2023), With other colleagues he also created the interdisciplinary and artistic review Sensibilités, Histoire, Sciences Sociale et critique.

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