James Derulo's

Portfolio

Download PDF Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee

Leave a Comment

Download PDF Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee

Und nun, auf diese Weise kann nicht auftreten müssen. Sie können in einer viel besseren Leben mit Variante Arten von Ressourcen vorwärts gehen. Reserve als hervorragende Quelle kann genehmigt werden, um Gebrauch zu machen. Buch ist eine Art und Weise und Überprüfung zu bringen, wenn Sie im Moment haben, es zu bekommen. Auch wie Sie nicht viel zu lesen; es wird Sie wirklich einige der neuen Erkenntnisse erkennen helfen. Und auch hier Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee geliefert voraus weiter entlang Ihrer Mittel.

Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee

Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee


Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee


Download PDF Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee

Derzeit laden Guide Anbieter, der beste Anbieter buchen Sie noch heute werden wird. Das ist es zu buchen. Sie können nicht wirklich das Gefühl, dass Sie mit dieser Veröffentlichung nicht vertraut sind, können Sie? Ja, praktisch jeder findet über dieses Buch aus. Es wird sicherlich unternimmt zusätzlich genau wie Führung in der Tat zur Verfügung gestellt. Wenn Sie die Möglichkeit, das Buch mit gut machen können, können Sie es auf die Vernunft holen und auch Weisung von genau, wie das Buch sein wird.

Praxis Lesen wird sicherlich immer Menschen dazu bringen , nicht zu zufrieden zu lesen Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee , ein Buch, zehn E-Buch, Hunderte Bücher, sowie vieles mehr. Zu lesen , die man ihnen das Gefühl , zufrieden ist Finishing Überprüfung dieses E-Book Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee und auch immer die Benachrichtigung über die E-Bücher machen, dann das verschiedene andere nächste Buch zu entdecken. Weiter geht es immer mehr. In dem Moment , zu vervollständigen , ein Buch Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee Lesen wird sicherlich konsequent vielfältig sein auf spar Zeit verlassen zu verbringen; Ein Beispiel ist die Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee

Nun, gerade wie erkennt man, wo dieses Buch kaufen Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee Nie etwas dagegen, jetzt konnte man nicht Führung Shop unter der intensiven Sonneneinstrahlung oder Abend besuchen Sie das E-Book Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee Wir hier ständig helfen Sie durchsuchen, um Hunderte Arten zu finden des Buches. Einer von ihnen ist das E-Book qualifiziert Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee Sie könnten die Web-Link Web-Seite in dieser Sammlung angeboten besuchen und danach entscheiden sich für das Herunterladen und installieren. Es wird nicht einmal mehr Zeit nehmen. Schließen Sie einfach auf Ihre Web-Zugänglichkeit und auch könnten Sie das E-Book Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee Online-Zugriff. Offensichtlich nach dem Herunterladen und Installieren von Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee, können Sie nicht veröffentlichen.

Sie können die weichen Daten dieses E-Book speichern Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee Es wird sowie Aufgaben auf Ihre Ausfallzeiten angewiesen zu öffnen und auch diese E-Book Review Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee Soft - Dokumente. Also, könnten Sie nicht besorgt sein , diese Veröffentlichung zu bringen Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, By Peter McPhee , wo Sie hinkommen. Lediglich um diese sot Daten auf Ihrem Gerät oder Computer - Festplatte, damit Sie , wann immer und überall gelesen haben Sie Zeit.

Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee

Pressestimmen

"Peter McPhee seeks to get under the skin and into the mind of Robespierre, juxtaposing personal and political factors in a gripping narrative. Robespierre emerges less as the man who ruined the Revolution than as a man the Revolution ruined--by the time of his death in 1794 he was an ailing exhausted husk very different from the bright-eyed, committed and courageous politician of 1789. McPhee's interpretation will surprise and intrigue in equal measure."--Colin Jones--Colin Jones'This book is a triumph: an important, open-minded and often moving account of Robespierre, that will stand as a very worthy successor to the previous great biographies. Peter McPhee's lifetime of research on the French Revolution draws out the context within which Robespierre's words and actions can be better understood, and his insights into Robespierre's youth, and the way he changed, displays a real understanding of Robespierre's psychology. A great and lasting achievement.' - Marisa Linton, author of The Politics of Virtue in Enlightenment France'A wonderful, convincing study, splendidly analytical and evocative, and beautifully penned.' - John Merriman, author of A History of Modern Europe and Dynamite Club: How a Bombing in Fin-de-siècle Paris Ignited the Age of Modern Terror

Über den Autor und weitere Mitwirkende

Peter McPhee is a professorial fellow at the University of Melbourne. He lives in Abbottsford, Australia.

Produktinformation

Taschenbuch: 320 Seiten

Verlag: Yale University Press; Auflage: Reprint (31. Oktober 2013)

Sprache: Englisch

ISBN-10: 0300197241

ISBN-13: 978-0300197242

Größe und/oder Gewicht:

13,2 x 2,5 x 20,1 cm

Durchschnittliche Kundenbewertung:

Schreiben Sie die erste Bewertung

Amazon Bestseller-Rang:

Nr. 148.635 in Fremdsprachige Bücher (Siehe Top 100 in Fremdsprachige Bücher)

Nearly a quarter-millennium after his public beheading Maximilien Robespierre remains a controversial figure. There are over 50 schools, streets and buildings named after “The Incorruptible” in France today, but none within the city limits of Paris. A 2009 attempt to get a street named after him in the City of Lights was voted down by the municipal council.In this 2010 biography by the distinguished Australian scholar of the French Revolution, Peter McPhee, Robespierre is treated objectively and, on the whole, sympathetically. The author pays particularly close attention to Robespierre’s early years and seeks to place his subject in proper historical perspective in the French Revolution overall and not merely as the driving force behind the Reign of Terror, which he wasn’t.“Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life” addresses three topics of note. First, McPhee rejects the harsh psychoanalysis many historians have applied to Robespierre in past biographies. Indeed, he claims that few historical figures have been written about so tendentiously over the centuries. Other biographers, in his opinion, have written Robespierre’s story in reverse, so to speak. Knowing how his life ended and the role he played in the Terror, they seek to show how his humble upbringing and second-class status led inexorably to the bloodbath of 1794. McPhee sneers that such an approach has led others to see him as “a repressed homosexual with a castration complex, a misogynist and pathological narcissist … whose self-identification with the Revolution was a classic case of Freudian ‘displaced libido.’” The author concedes that “Robespierre was formed by the difficult circumstances of his upbringing and by his adult experience of the distinctive social structures of his province,” but argues that “there is no clear evidence” to support the wild claims of other historians.Robespierre’s rise to national political prominence was certainly improbable. He was conceived out-of-wedlock in 1758. His mother died when he was just six-years-old. His father essentially abandoned the family (he died alone in Munich in 1777) and left his children to be reared by his dead wife’s sisters in the back of his father-in-law’s brewery in the provincial town of Arras. Other biographers have argued that this hardscrabble childhood produced Robespierre’s later need for acceptance and phobias about personal appearance and physical intimacy. McPhee simply notes what is known: that Robespierre was a serious young man and an exceptional student who, at the age of 11, earned a prestigious scholarship to study in Paris. He returned to Arras in 1781 at the age of 23 to start his law practice and quickly established a strong reputation as an attorney and progressive voice on social issues. He was quirky, aloof and physically unprepossessing, perhaps just 5’3” and suffering from a nervous twitch in his eye and neck, but McPhee doesn’t try to read too much into how his adolescence and personality influenced his future political decisions.Second, the author stresses that Robespierre’s unshakable belief in the inherent goodness and virtue of the people is what really set him apart, not his childhood or unique psychological makeup. This tenacious belief in the general will and the need to regenerate French society forms the basis of McPhee’s analysis. Robespierre took his worldview from his hero, Jean-Jacques Rousseau. It was further refined by his reading of the classics, particularly Plutarch’s “Life of Lycurgus” and Cicero’s speeches on the conspiracy of Catiline. Robespierre’s faith in the people and their innate goodness never wavered, nor did his belief that he alone understood the people’s general will. And therein lies the rub, as McPhee sees it. For if the people were by nature good, then any gaps in societal behavior between its natural state of goodness and reality could only be explained by the direct influence of malignant forces. And Robespierre saw malignant forces at work everywhere. The émigré French nobility were scheming to topple the Revolution by force; France’s traditional rivals, Austria and England, were waiting to carve up the French Empire overseas; greedy aristocrats hoarded grain to starve the people and extract excessive profits; the Catholic Church churned up counter-revolution in the provinces in the hopes of one day reclaiming their confiscated property; the radical deputies of the National Assembly pushed an agenda of radical de-Christianization in an attempt to undermine popular support for the Revolution at home and abroad. The so-called “Foreign Plot” amounted to a conspiracy theory of faked-moon-landing dimensions, but Robespierre never doubted it for a second, according to McPhee. The author is quite charitable in his assessment of Robespierre on this issue. It made him seem like a delusional paranoid schizophrenic to me.Finally, why did Robespierre fall when he did? In short, McPhee claims that his health and political instincts failed him in the summer of 1794. He spent the last months of his life “in stressed exhaustion and fear of assassination” and made a series of miscalculations that doomed him in the end. On June 8th he held the elaborate Festival of the Supreme Being during his two-week term as president of the National Convention and exposed himself to mutterings about his attempt at deification. Two days later he pressured the Convention to pass the Law of 22 Prairial that tightened his grip over the prime institution of the Terror, the Revolutionary Tribunal (future treason trials could only be held in Paris, no defense witnesses were allowed, and the only possible verdicts were innocence or death). Next, he remained committed to pursuing the Terror even after news of the decisive French victory over the Austrians at Fleurus on June 28th, which many saw as an opportunity to map out a return to constitutional rule. Moreover, during these fateful events Robespierre was absent from the Jacobin Club and the floor of the National Convention as he convalesced in a private apartment in Paris. Finally, in his final speech on July 27th Robespierre made wild threats about bringing to trial counter-revolutionary members of the Convention, but failed to name names. Thus, everyone had reason to fear. “No one was safe when Robespierre was now plainly unable to distinguish between dissent and treason,” McPhee says. “The Convention had had enough.”The author ends on a generally sympathetic note. “Far from the emotionally stunted, rigidly puritanical and icily cruel monster of history and literature, [Robespierre] was a passionate man.” His tireless efforts had helped the French Revolution deliver on many of the core principles of 1789: popular sovereignty, constitutional government, legal and religious equality, and the end to corporate and aristocratic privilege. Other policies he championed – such as free and secular public education, and social welfare for the sick and unemployed – would eventually come to pass. And, perhaps most important of all, McPhee says, “Robespierre and the Committee of Public Safety had led the Republic and the Revolution to security.” It just so happened that by the time that safety had been secured “Robespierre was ill, exhausted, irrational and in despair.”

Biographies of Robespierre often appear to be nothing more than reflections of the political prejudices of their authors. Similarly readers tend to approve those books which confirm their own prejudices and denounce the ones that don't. There is little doubt that the French revolution can be easily seen as a tragedy with Robespierre as the tragic hero. Those very same qualities which brought him fame and power were the very flaws that lead to his infamy and death. McPhee tries to avoid the pitfalls of demonizing or hero worshipping Robespierre. He focuses on Robespierre's youth and early career. Painting a nuanced picture of his psychology. This book is not for those people who want Robespierre to be a monster. Instead he is presented as a human being. Those who want to see him as the paragon of virtue and the savior of France will also be disappointed. This is oe of the better biographies available.

With so much happening today in politics and society, one must (paradoxically) say: there are few things more urgent than reading about the French Revolution.Professor McPhee gives his portrait of the most controversial character of a time full of controversial characters. His Robespierre is neither saint nor devil, neither a toy in the hands of destiny nor an all-powerful conspirator. The author strives to avoid implying that his destiny was present in his earliest actions. And tries to negate simplistic explanations (tyrant, hero, savior or monster, etc.)This book helps to show how freedom of press, independence of judges, and the need for a professional public administration really arose. They were not an inevitable “progress” nor a conspiracy of straight white men against all the others. They were result of compromises, advances, struggles and power deals.We see this maelstrom through one privileged and tragic observer: Robespierre.Two flaws prevent me from ascribing five stars: some happenings could have been more thoroughly described, for example the “Revolution inside the Revolution” from August 10 1792. And the Robespierre's imprisonment and the loss of his last political battle in his last 48 hours could have been conveyed in more detail.

I'd probably recommend this biography of Robespierre over the also recently published "Fatal Purity" by Ruth Scurr. McPhee seems genuinely sympathetic to his subject for one and also it's better sourced with a pretty thorough bibliography at the end. Interestingly, McPhee spends a lot of time on Robespierre's friendships with women of the revolution and his social circle back in Arras, which is nice because not many biographers do.

Well written book that views the work and life of Robespierre as a whole. I highly recommend this book to anyone who is seriously interested in learning more about Robespierre beyond his current - and one-sided - image.

Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee PDF
Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee EPub
Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee Doc
Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee iBooks
Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee rtf
Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee Mobipocket
Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee Kindle

Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee PDF

Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee PDF

Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee PDF
Robespierre: A Revolutionary Life, by Peter McPhee PDF
Next PostPosting Lebih Baru Previous PostPosting Lama Beranda

0 komentar:

Posting Komentar