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Awards
OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Siân Reynolds (, Emerita Professor of French, University of Stirling)Publisher: Oxford University Press Imprint: Oxford University Press Dimensions: Width: 16.30cm , Height: 2.50cm , Length: 24.00cm Weight: 0.682kg ISBN: 9780199560424ISBN 10: 0199560420 Pages: 344 Publication Date: 07 June 2012 Audience: College/higher education , Professional and scholarly , Tertiary & Higher Education , Professional & Vocational Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: To order Stock availability from the supplier is unknown. We will order it for you and ship this item to you once it is received by us. Table of ContentsPrologue: 4 February 1780 Introduction Part I: Getting Married: Before 1780 1: The Bride's Story 1: The child Manon 2: The Bride's Story 2: Becoming an Enlightenment woman: Marie-Jeanne 3: The Groom's Story 1: Odd man out 4: The Groom's Story 2: Turgot's disciple 5: Who to marry? Suitors and fiancé(e)s Part II: Married life: 1780-1789 6: Bonjour Loup! Living together 7: Educating Eudora: Parenthood together 8: Essays and Academies: Writing together 9: Leaving the North: To the Beaujolais together 10: The Calm before the Storm: Housekeeping together Part III: Revolution: Bliss to be Alive 1789-1791 11: 1789: Watching from Lyon 12: 1790: Joining the Municipal Revolution 13: 1790: A Community of Friends? 14: 1791: When is a Salon not a Salon? Parisian circles 15: 1791: After Varennes 16: 1791: Provincial life has lost its charms Part IV: In the Thick of it 17: March 1792: What, no Buckles? The Brissotin Ministry 18: Summer 1792: Minister of the King 19: June-August 1792: Out of the Frying Pan into the Fire 20: August-September 1792: Invasion and Massacre 21: 1792-1793: Minister of the Republic: Grain and Museums 22: 'This astonishing lady': What did the Minister's Wife do all day? 23: 1792-1793: The Bureau d'esprit public: Fact or Fantasy? Part V: The Closing Trap 24: January-May 1793: Nobody's Minister 25: January-November 1793: Marie-Jeanne in Love 26: 31 May 1793: One Night in Summer 27: June-October 1793: A la vie et à la mort: Prison and Flight 28: November 1793: The Tribunal and the Swordstick Sources and Bibliography AcknowledgementsReviews[a] sympathetic, but also critical and always scholarly biography ... it was the great tragedy of the Terror that former colleagues should round on each other. Not only did those who had frequented the Rolands, from Brissot to Danton and Robespierre, preish in the process, but so too did the fraternal republic. It is the great merit of Reynold's book to demonstrate how both the Rolands shaped and shared this dreadful fate. Malcolm Crook, History Today Thoroughly researched and clearly written, Marriage and Revolution is an important contribution to our understanding of the interaction between private lives and public affairs in the revolutionary era. It also offers new insights into the nature of the Brissotin movement and the way in which the revolutionary government functioned prior to the establishment of the Committee of Public Safety in mid-1793. Jeremy Popkin, H-France Review Reynolds succeeds in correcting a great deal of the mythology surrounding Madame Roland. This significant monograph is a vindication of Roland, a figure who has been has been overshadowed by not only his wife, but also historians focus on parliamentary assemblies rather than ministries. Leigh Whaley, French History [a] sympathetic, but also critical and always scholarly biography ... it was the great tragedy of the Terror that former colleagues should round on each other. Not only did those who had frequented the Rolands, from Brissot to Danton and Robespierre, preish in the process, but so too did the fraternal republic. It is the great merit of Reynold's book to demonstrate how both the Rolands shaped and shared this dreadful fate. Malcolm Crook, History Today Author InformationSiân Reynolds was born and educated in Cardiff, read Modern Languages at St Anne's College, Oxford, and has a doctorate in History from the University of Paris-VII, supervised by Michelle Perrot. She has taught in secondary schools, adult education, the Universities of Sussex and Edinburgh, and was Professor of French at the University of Stirling from 1990-2004. She has published books on both French and Scottish history, and translated works by leading French historians such as Fernand Braudel, as well as detective novels by Fred Vargas. She is a past president of the Association for the Study of Modern & Contemporary France, and is currently Chair of the Scottish Working People's History Trust. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |
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