Samuel Hayat (CEVIPOF, Sciences Po, France)
Revolutionary Republicanism
Participation and Representation in 1848 France
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Samuel Hayat (CEVIPOF, Sciences Po, France)
Revolutionary Republicanism
Participation and Representation in 1848 France
- Broschiertes Buch
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.
Produktdetails
- Produktdetails
- Routledge Studies in Radical History and Politics
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 230
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 156mm x 234mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 374g
- ISBN-13: 9781032190914
- ISBN-10: 1032190914
- Artikelnr.: 69033580
- Routledge Studies in Radical History and Politics
- Verlag: Taylor & Francis Ltd
- Seitenzahl: 230
- Erscheinungstermin: 22. Dezember 2023
- Englisch
- Abmessung: 156mm x 234mm x 16mm
- Gewicht: 374g
- ISBN-13: 9781032190914
- ISBN-10: 1032190914
- Artikelnr.: 69033580
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