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  • 1
    Online Resource
    Online Resource
    Cambridge : Cambridge University Press
    ISBN: 131613167X , 1316014649 , 9781316131671 , 9781316014646
    Language: English
    Pages: 1 Online-Ressource (viii, 292 pages)
    Parallel Title: Erscheint auch als Alpaugh, Micah Non-violence and the French Revolution
    DDC: 303.48/40944361
    Keywords: Nonviolence History 18th century ; Demonstrations History 18th century ; Protest movements History 18th century ; HISTORY ; Europe ; General ; Demonstrations ; Nonviolence ; Protest movements ; Französische Revolution ; Demonstration ; Gewalttätigkeit ; History ; France History Revolution, 1789-1799 ; France ; Paris ; France
    Abstract: "Historians of the French Revolution have traditionally emphasised the centrality of violence to revolutionary protest. However, Micah Alpaugh reveals instead the surprising prevalence of non-violent tactics to demonstrate that much of the popular action taken in revolutionary Paris was not in fact violent. Tracing the origins of the political demonstration to the French Revolutionary period, he reveals how Parisian protesters typically tried to avoid violence, conducting campaigns predominantly through peaceful marches, petitions, banquets and mass-meetings, which only rarely escalated to physical force in their stand-offs with authorities. Out of over 750 events, no more than twelve percent appear to have resulted in physical violence at any stage. Rewriting the political history of the people of Paris, Non-Violence and the French Revolution sheds new light on our understanding of Revolutionary France to show that revolutionary sans-culottes played a pivotal role in developing the democratically oriented protest techniques still used today"--
    Abstract: 2. Political demonstrations and the politics of escalation in 1789Spring 1789, Réveillon, and the coming of Revolutionary protest; From Palais-Royal sociability to the rupture of the Bastille Days; Women, men, and the making of the October Days; Conclusion; 3. From rapprochement to radicalism, 1790-1791; Revolutionary commemoration and the rediscovery of mass-movement; Political demonstrations and Parisian radicalization, September 1790-June 1791; Peaceful protest and the republican cause, June-July 1791; Conclusion; 4. War, collaborative protest, and the 1792 republican movement.
    Abstract: 7. Moderate and conservative marches in Revolutionary ParisThe increasingly contentious history of the religious procession; The Muscadins: contestations of the jeunesse dorée, 1793-1795; Right-wing opposition and the final insurrection of Vendémiaire; Conclusion; Conclusion; Appendix Parisian protests, 1787-1795; Bibliography; Primary sources; Archives; Manuscripts; Archives municipales d'Amiens; Archives municipales de Marseille; Bibliothèque de l'Assemblée nationale, Paris; Bibliothèque historique de la ville de Paris; Bibliothèque municipale d'Amiens; Bibliothèque municipale d'Auch.
    Abstract: Bibliothèque municipale d'AvignonBibliothèque municipale de Clermont-Ferrand; Bibliothèque municipale de Lyon; Bibliothèque municipale de Marseille; Bibliothèque municipale d'Orléans; Bibliothèque municipale de Poitiers; Bibliothèque municipale de Versailles; Bibliothèque nationale François Mitterrand, Paris; Bibliothèque nationale -- Richelieu, Paris; British Library, London; John Rylands Library, Manchester; Newspapers; Books, pamphlets and published documents; Secondary works; Index.
    Abstract: Cover; Half-title; Title page; Copyright information; Table of contents; List of tables; Acknowledgments; Introduction; Historiography: political demonstrations, French Revolutionary protest, and the presumption of violence; Non-violence, violence, and French Revolutionary protest; Approach: sources and organization; 1. Marching in Paris from the Old Regime to the Revolution; Eighteenth-century processional marches and the origins of the Revolutionary political demonstration; Police, political demonstrations, and pre-Revolutionary protest; Conclusion.
    Abstract: Spring 1792: marching campaigns and the rise of the sectionsJune 20, 1792: the mechanics of the Revolutionary political demonstration; Radical collaborations and the insurrection of August 10; Conclusion; 5. Fraternal protest in a time of terror, August 1792 -- September 1793; Sans-culottes in national politics, August 1792-April 1793; Insurrections without bloodshed: May 31-June 2 and September 4-5, 1793; Conclusion; 6. Reasserting collective action, 1794-1795; Year II to Germinal: the rebirth of the political demonstration; Reaction and repression: Germinal to Prairial; Conclusion.
    Note: Includes bibliographical references and index
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
    URL: Volltext  (URL des Erstveröffentlichers)
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