The Revolutionary Career of Maximilien Robespierre

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University of Chicago Press, 15 jul 1989 - 308 páginas
As it changed forever the political landscape of the modern world, the French Revolution was driven by a new type of personality: the confirmed, self-aware revolutionary. Maximilien Robespierre originated the role and embodied its ideological essence and extremes; the self that he projected to the people was equated with the ideals for which he strove. In creating this intellectual biography of so enigmatic a figure, David Jordan has stressed the words of the man about himself. With great imagination and insight, Jordan places Robespierre's self-conceptualization within the context of events and explains how Robespierre "The Incorruptible"—a man seen by contemporaries as virtuous—could not only equate justice with vengeance and demand it of the people, but also stand as its symbol before the world.
 

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Índice

1 The Memory of a Tyrant
13
2 The Revolutionary Revealed
23
3 Representative of the People
43
4 Robespierre the Orator
63
5 The War Debates
81
6 Conversion to Insurrection
97
7 The Kings Trial
117
8 Purging the Convention
133
11 A Moral Blow to Fanaticism
185
12 Thermidor
205
13 The Incorruptible
221
Epilogue
237
Portraits of Robespierre
249
Notes
257
List of Works Cited
299
Index
305

9 Robespierre the Ideologue
149
10 The Committee of Public Safety
165

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Página 300 - Rapport fait au nom de la commission chargée de l'examen des papiers trouvés chez Robespierre et ses complices, par EB Courtois, député du département de l'Aube, dans la séance du 16 nivôse an III...

Sobre el autor (1989)

David P. Jordan is the LAS Distinguished Professor of French History at the University of Illinois at Chicago and the author of "Transforming Paris" and "The Revolutionary Career of Maximilien Robespierre".

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