The French Revolution and British culture

書誌事項

The French Revolution and British culture

edited by Ceri Crossley and Ian Small

Oxford University Press, 1989

大学図書館所蔵 件 / 29

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注記

Inlcudes bibliographical references

内容説明・目次

内容説明

This volume of essays by British and North American academics is an examination of British responses to the French Revolution and of the ways in which the idea of the Revolution was mediated in British culture. The text's controlling idea is that the manner in which the culture of one country appropriates the culture of another is complex and is a process which develops over time. For the modern historian, what is significant is the variety of ways in which British culture represented the French Revolution and assigned meanings to it.

目次

  • The French Revolution and British culture, Ian Small
  • the meaning of revolution in Britain, 1770-1800, George Woodcock
  • the impact of the French Revolution on British politics and society - the proletariat finds a voice, Clive Emsley
  • radical spectators of the Revolution - the case of the "Analytical Review", Brian Rigby
  • the impact of the French Revolution upon British statecraft - 1789-1921, Lord Beloff
  • Macaulay and the French Revolution, John Clive
  • the French Revolution and the condition of England - crowds and power in the early Victorian novel, David Lodge
  • the French Revolution and the avant-garde, Ian Small and Josephine Guy
  • the transfer of technology between Britain and France and the French Revolution, John Harris
  • man's second disobedience - a vindication of Burke, Roger Scuton.

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