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Revolutionary Republicanism provides a history of French republicanism seen through a seminal episode of its creation - the 1848 revolution.
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Revolutionary Republicanism provides a history of French republicanism seen through a seminal episode of its creation - the 1848 revolution.
Dieser Download kann aus rechtlichen Gründen nur mit Rechnungsadresse in A, B, BG, CY, CZ, D, DK, EW, E, FIN, F, GR, HR, H, IRL, I, LT, L, LR, M, NL, PL, P, R, S, SLO, SK ausgeliefert werden.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 242
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781003824091
- Artikelnr.: 69570086
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis
- Seitenzahl: 242
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- ISBN-13: 9781003824091
- Artikelnr.: 69570086
Samuel Hayat is a researcher in politics for the French National Centre for Scientific Research (CNRS) at the Sciences Po Center for Political Research (CEVIPOF).
Acknowledgements
Introduction: The two faces of the French republic
* The 1848 Revolution and the meaning of the republic
* Which history of republicanism?
* The republic and its double
1 From one revolution to another (1789- 1848)
* Ultra- royalist reaction and the emergence of the liberal movement
* Configurations of the liberal movement
* The theory of representative government
* Representative government in practice
* The emergence of the republican movement
* Republicans and the proletariat
* The association: a shared arena for workers and republicans
* The politicisation of local elections and the reformist movement
* Electoral reform and the social question
* The banquet campaign and the fall of the July regime
2 The February Republic: A plural system
* Establishment of the Provisional Government
* Restructuring of the National Guard
* Establishment of the Luxembourg Commission
* The beginnings of the club movement
* The transformation of citizenship
* The unrepresentable
3 Institutions under the February Republic: A bone of contention
* The Provisional Government: temporary administration or revolutionary
authority?
* The Parisian National Guard: law enforcement or the armed people?
* The Luxembourg Commission, 'socialist synagogue' or unprecedented
representation of labour?
* The Paris press and clubs: conversation or collective action?
4 17 March and the invention of demonstration
* Towards the 17 March demonstration
* 16 March: the first reactionary demonstration
* The demands of the 17 March demonstration
* The demonstration as representation of the represented
* The emergence of partisanship
* The Ledru- Rollin circulars and democratic republicanism
* Lamartine's moderate republicanism
5 16 April and the failure of democratic republicanism
* 16 April, a clash between republicanisms
* The people and the streets
* The National Guard: a law enforcement tool in the service of the
state
* The failure of the Luxembourg Commission
* Political clubs and newspapers, spaces for free discussion
6 15 May and the triumph of election
* The electoral legitimacy of Constituent Assembly
* 15 May: parliamentary inviolability put to the test
* Interpreting the events of 15 May
* Absolute representation
7 The two republics
* Identifying the 'idle': the two faces of National Workshop labourers
1. The
journaux rouges and social- democratic republicanism
2. Labour organisation, embodiment of the social- democratic republic
3. 'It must end'
4. Defending the republic
Conclusion
* Established republicanism
* The 'Proudhonian moment' of the French labour movement
* An autonomous labour movement
Index
Introduction: The two faces of the French republic
* The 1848 Revolution and the meaning of the republic
* Which history of republicanism?
* The republic and its double
1 From one revolution to another (1789- 1848)
* Ultra- royalist reaction and the emergence of the liberal movement
* Configurations of the liberal movement
* The theory of representative government
* Representative government in practice
* The emergence of the republican movement
* Republicans and the proletariat
* The association: a shared arena for workers and republicans
* The politicisation of local elections and the reformist movement
* Electoral reform and the social question
* The banquet campaign and the fall of the July regime
2 The February Republic: A plural system
* Establishment of the Provisional Government
* Restructuring of the National Guard
* Establishment of the Luxembourg Commission
* The beginnings of the club movement
* The transformation of citizenship
* The unrepresentable
3 Institutions under the February Republic: A bone of contention
* The Provisional Government: temporary administration or revolutionary
authority?
* The Parisian National Guard: law enforcement or the armed people?
* The Luxembourg Commission, 'socialist synagogue' or unprecedented
representation of labour?
* The Paris press and clubs: conversation or collective action?
4 17 March and the invention of demonstration
* Towards the 17 March demonstration
* 16 March: the first reactionary demonstration
* The demands of the 17 March demonstration
* The demonstration as representation of the represented
* The emergence of partisanship
* The Ledru- Rollin circulars and democratic republicanism
* Lamartine's moderate republicanism
5 16 April and the failure of democratic republicanism
* 16 April, a clash between republicanisms
* The people and the streets
* The National Guard: a law enforcement tool in the service of the
state
* The failure of the Luxembourg Commission
* Political clubs and newspapers, spaces for free discussion
6 15 May and the triumph of election
* The electoral legitimacy of Constituent Assembly
* 15 May: parliamentary inviolability put to the test
* Interpreting the events of 15 May
* Absolute representation
7 The two republics
* Identifying the 'idle': the two faces of National Workshop labourers
1. The
journaux rouges and social- democratic republicanism
2. Labour organisation, embodiment of the social- democratic republic
3. 'It must end'
4. Defending the republic
Conclusion
* Established republicanism
* The 'Proudhonian moment' of the French labour movement
* An autonomous labour movement
Index
Acknowledgements
Introduction: The two faces of the French republic
* The 1848 Revolution and the meaning of the republic
* Which history of republicanism?
* The republic and its double
1 From one revolution to another (1789- 1848)
* Ultra- royalist reaction and the emergence of the liberal movement
* Configurations of the liberal movement
* The theory of representative government
* Representative government in practice
* The emergence of the republican movement
* Republicans and the proletariat
* The association: a shared arena for workers and republicans
* The politicisation of local elections and the reformist movement
* Electoral reform and the social question
* The banquet campaign and the fall of the July regime
2 The February Republic: A plural system
* Establishment of the Provisional Government
* Restructuring of the National Guard
* Establishment of the Luxembourg Commission
* The beginnings of the club movement
* The transformation of citizenship
* The unrepresentable
3 Institutions under the February Republic: A bone of contention
* The Provisional Government: temporary administration or revolutionary
authority?
* The Parisian National Guard: law enforcement or the armed people?
* The Luxembourg Commission, 'socialist synagogue' or unprecedented
representation of labour?
* The Paris press and clubs: conversation or collective action?
4 17 March and the invention of demonstration
* Towards the 17 March demonstration
* 16 March: the first reactionary demonstration
* The demands of the 17 March demonstration
* The demonstration as representation of the represented
* The emergence of partisanship
* The Ledru- Rollin circulars and democratic republicanism
* Lamartine's moderate republicanism
5 16 April and the failure of democratic republicanism
* 16 April, a clash between republicanisms
* The people and the streets
* The National Guard: a law enforcement tool in the service of the
state
* The failure of the Luxembourg Commission
* Political clubs and newspapers, spaces for free discussion
6 15 May and the triumph of election
* The electoral legitimacy of Constituent Assembly
* 15 May: parliamentary inviolability put to the test
* Interpreting the events of 15 May
* Absolute representation
7 The two republics
* Identifying the 'idle': the two faces of National Workshop labourers
1. The
journaux rouges and social- democratic republicanism
2. Labour organisation, embodiment of the social- democratic republic
3. 'It must end'
4. Defending the republic
Conclusion
* Established republicanism
* The 'Proudhonian moment' of the French labour movement
* An autonomous labour movement
Index
Introduction: The two faces of the French republic
* The 1848 Revolution and the meaning of the republic
* Which history of republicanism?
* The republic and its double
1 From one revolution to another (1789- 1848)
* Ultra- royalist reaction and the emergence of the liberal movement
* Configurations of the liberal movement
* The theory of representative government
* Representative government in practice
* The emergence of the republican movement
* Republicans and the proletariat
* The association: a shared arena for workers and republicans
* The politicisation of local elections and the reformist movement
* Electoral reform and the social question
* The banquet campaign and the fall of the July regime
2 The February Republic: A plural system
* Establishment of the Provisional Government
* Restructuring of the National Guard
* Establishment of the Luxembourg Commission
* The beginnings of the club movement
* The transformation of citizenship
* The unrepresentable
3 Institutions under the February Republic: A bone of contention
* The Provisional Government: temporary administration or revolutionary
authority?
* The Parisian National Guard: law enforcement or the armed people?
* The Luxembourg Commission, 'socialist synagogue' or unprecedented
representation of labour?
* The Paris press and clubs: conversation or collective action?
4 17 March and the invention of demonstration
* Towards the 17 March demonstration
* 16 March: the first reactionary demonstration
* The demands of the 17 March demonstration
* The demonstration as representation of the represented
* The emergence of partisanship
* The Ledru- Rollin circulars and democratic republicanism
* Lamartine's moderate republicanism
5 16 April and the failure of democratic republicanism
* 16 April, a clash between republicanisms
* The people and the streets
* The National Guard: a law enforcement tool in the service of the
state
* The failure of the Luxembourg Commission
* Political clubs and newspapers, spaces for free discussion
6 15 May and the triumph of election
* The electoral legitimacy of Constituent Assembly
* 15 May: parliamentary inviolability put to the test
* Interpreting the events of 15 May
* Absolute representation
7 The two republics
* Identifying the 'idle': the two faces of National Workshop labourers
1. The
journaux rouges and social- democratic republicanism
2. Labour organisation, embodiment of the social- democratic republic
3. 'It must end'
4. Defending the republic
Conclusion
* Established republicanism
* The 'Proudhonian moment' of the French labour movement
* An autonomous labour movement
Index