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The Revolutionary Atlantic Rafe Blaufarb (Professor, Professor, Florida State University)

The Revolutionary Atlantic von Rafe Blaufarb (Professor, Professor, Florida State University)

The Revolutionary Atlantic Rafe Blaufarb (Professor, Professor, Florida State University)


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Zusammenfassung

The first text to examine the American Revolution, the French Revolution, the Haitian Revolution, and the various Latin American Revolutions from a synoptic perspective.

The Revolutionary Atlantic Zusammenfassung

The Revolutionary Atlantic: Republican Visions, 1760-1830: A Documentary History Rafe Blaufarb (Professor, Professor, Florida State University)

This is a sourcebook on the revolutionary Atlantic, a term historians increasingly use to describe the way the many revolutions from 1776 (USA) to 1826 (end of the wars of independence in Latin America) can be viewed as part of a connected whole. It is the first text to examine the American Revolution, the French Revolution, the Haitian Revolution, and the various Latin American Revolutions from a synoptic perspective.

The Revolutionary Atlantic Bewertungen

Encompassing the major rebellions that transformed the Atlantic world in the Age of Revolutions, The Revolutionary Atlantic is a major achievement. Blaufarb's collection of documents records the voices of elites and masses alike, and is remarkably coherent thanks to its focus on political ideas, not events. Highly recommended for students and scholars. * Willem Klooster, Clark University *
Fascinating and comprehensive collection of primary sources ont he Age of Revolutions, ranging from Enlightenment political theory to empire and slavery. Blaufarb treats the U.S., French, Haitian and Latin American Revolutions as a common movement. His chronological coverage is truly impressive, spanning from the Seven Years' War to the 1820s. Will be tremendously useful to instructors seeking to connect the different Atlantic Revolutions. * Alyssa Sepinwall, California State University - San Marcos *
The Revolutionary Atlantic is an essential resource for anyone interested in the political upheavals that culminated in the American, French, Haitian, and Latin American Revolutions of the late eighteenth and early nineteenth centuries. Through its concise chapter introductions and vast array of documents focused on the period's new political ideas, The Revolutionary Atlantic reveals the connections among notions of republicanism and equality that sprang up around the Atlantic World. It also reveals the host of actors - elite European descended men, indigenous peoples, women, slaves, serfs, and the urban poor - who gave local meaning and form to those ideals through their words and deeds. The Revolutionary Atlantic is a most welcome addition to the literature on the Age of Revolutions. * Rebecca Hartkopf Schloss, Texas A & M University *
Rafe Blaufarb's compilation and translation of political documetns from the Age of Revolutions provides an excellent reader for scholars and students who seek to compare the precepts and arguments in favor of democracy, equality and independence that emerged during the French and Haitian revolution with key texts from North American and Napoleonic-era Latin American independence movements. * Jordana Dym, Skidmore College *

Über Rafe Blaufarb (Professor, Professor, Florida State University)

Rafe Blaufarb (Ph.D., University of Michigan) is Ben Weider Eminent Scholar Chair in Napoleonic History and the Director of the Institute on Napoleon and the French Revolution at Florida State University. He is the author of The French Army, 1750-1820: Careers, Talent, Merit (2002), Bonapartists in the Borderlands: French Refugees and Exiles on the Gulf Coast, 1815-1835 (2005), and Napoleon: Symbol for an Age (2007). He has published articles in a number of journals, including the AHR, Past and Present, Annales, and the Journal of Modern History.

Inhaltsverzeichnis

Acknowledgements About the Author Map 1: The Atlantic in 1763 Map 2: The Atlantic in 1830 INTRODUCTION CHAPTER ONE: THE ENGLIGHTENMENT The Giants John Locke, Two Treatises of Government (1689) Montesquieu, The Spirit of the Laws (1748) Denis Diderot, Political Authority (1751) Jean-Jacques Rousseau, The Social Contract (1762) History and Political Theory Henry de Boulainvillier, History of the Ancient Government of France (1727) Nicholas Moreau, Lessons in Morality, Politics and Public Law drawn from the History of Our Monarchy (1773) Gabriel Bonnot de Mably, Observations on the History of France (1765) Enlightenment and Revolution Guillame-Joseph Saige, The Citizen's Catechism (1788) CHAPTER TWO: THE STRAINS OF EMPIRE Spain Alexander Von Humboldt on New Spain (Mexico) (1814) Economic Complaints (1828) Exploitation and Corruption: The View from the Top (1768) Exploitation and Corruption: The View from Below (1781) First Stirrings of Revolution (1799) France Taxing Saint-Domingue (1763-4) Great Britain Royal Proclamation on the Western Territories (1763) Grievances of Western Settlers (1764) Reaction to the Quebec Act (1775) Adam Smith on Colonial Taxation (1776) A New Colonial Order (1764) Resistance: New York Petition to the House of Commons (1764) Resistance: The Irish House of Commons (1763) Resistance: The Jamaican House of Assembly (1769-83) CHAPTER THREE: ORIGINS OF THE AMERICAN REVOLUTION Repealing the Stamp Act (1766) Parliamentary Debate over the Withdrawal of the Stamp Act (1766) Parliamentary Testimony of Benjamin Franklin (1766) Conflict Intensifies (1766-1774) Samuel Adams, The Rights of the Colonists (1772) A Climate of Paranoia (1773) More Paranoia (1774) On the Brink (1774-75) The Continental Congress's Declaration and Resolves (1774) Edmund Burke, Speech on Conciliation with America (1775) Imperial Shockwaves The View from Jamaica (1774) The View from Ireland (1776) The Breaking Point (1775-76) Declaration of the Causes and Necessity of Taking Up Arms (1775) Thomas Paine, Common Sense (1776) Charles Inglis, The True Interest of America Impartially Stated (1776) Declaration of Independence (1776) Loyalist Declaration of Dependence (1781) CHAPTER FOUR: WINNING AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE Race, Slavery, and the War Lord Dunmore's Proclamation (1775) John Laurens Recommends Recruiting Slaves (1778) Alexander Hamilton's Response to the Idea (1779) George Washington's Reaction (1779) Slave Petition for Freedom to the Massachusetts Legislature (1777) Pennslyvania Abolishes Slavery (1781) Native Americans and the American Revolution Oneida Declaration of Neutrality (1775) Continental Congress Seeks Iroquois Neutrality (1775) Loyalists Lafayette describes the American Revolution as a Civil War (1776-1790) Loyalist Song: The Rebels Show the Loyalists No Mercy (1779) A Government for Independent America John Adams, Thoughts on Government (1776) Articles of Confederation (1777) The Constitution of 1787 James Madison, Vices of the Political System of the United States (1787) The Problem of Slavery and Representation (1787) The Constitution (1787) Ratifying the Constitution James Madison, Federalist Number 10 (1787) Antifederalist Number 17 (1788) Virginia Declaration of Rights (1776) Bill of Rights (1791) George Washington's Farewell Address (1796) CHAPTER FIVE: ORIGINS OF THE FRENCH REVOLUTION Resistance to the Parelments Remonstration of the Parlement of Paris Against the Acts of Violence Committed Against the Different Parlements (1763) They Royal Session Known as the Session of Flagellation (1766) Remonstrations Leading to the Maupeou Coup (1770-71) Remonstration of the Cour des Aides (1775) Alternate Pathways to Reform Marquis de Mirabeau, Memoire sur les Etats Provinciaux (1750) Anne-Robert-Jacques Turgot, Memoir on Municipalities (1787) Jacques Necker, Account Given to the King (1781) The Pre-Revolution (1787-88) The Assembly of Notables (1787) Parlement's Remonstration against the Stamp Tax (1787) Radicalization and the Shifting Alignment of Political Conflict Deliberation to be Taken by the Third Estate in all the Municipalities of the French Kingdom (1788) Parlement's Denunciation of the Deliberation to be Taken (1788) Abbe Sieyes, What is the Third Estate? (1789) Memoir of the Princes (1788) Result of the Council on the Composition of the Estates-General (1788) The Nation Speaks Cahier of the Clergy of Rouen (1789) Cahier of the Nobility of Rouen (1789) Cahier of the Third-Estate of Rouen (1789) Cahier of the Barrel-Makers of Rouen (1789) La Val de la Haye (1789) CHAPTER SIX: THE FRENCH REVOLUTION From Estates-General to the National Assembly Arthur Young, Travels in France (1789) Dismantling the Old Regime A Wigmaker Recounts the Great Fear at Cremieu (1789) The Marquis d'Agoult Describes the Night of August 4th (1789) Decree of 10 August 1789 The New Regime...and Its Limits Declaration of the Rights of Man and the Citizen (1789) Olympe de Gouges, The Rights of Women (1791) Maximillian Robespierre, Speed Against Property Qualifications to Exercise the Full Rights of Citizenship (1791) Abbe Gregoire, Motion in Favor of the Jews (1789) The Church's Place in the New Regime The Constitutionality of Corps: Le Chapellier (1789) The Clerical Position: Archbishop Boisgelin (1789) The Civil Constitution of the Clergy (1790) Reaction to the Revolution Edmund Burke, Reflections on the Revolution in France (1790) Thomas Paine, The Rights of Men (1791) Revolution and Counterrevolution The Jacobin Crusade (1792) The King's Flight (1791) War The Declaration of War (1792) The Brunswick Manifesto (1792) The Marseillaise (1792) The Levy en Masse (1793) The Republican Revolution Saint-Just, Republican Institutions (1794) Maximillian Robespierre, The Principles of Political Morality (1794) Declaration of the Rights of Man and Citizen (1793) The Directory Drafting the Directorial Constitution (1795) Inaugural Message of the Directory to the French People (1795) Doctrine of Gracchus Babeuf (1794) The Brumaire Coup and Consulate Consular Address to the French People (1799) The Concordat (1802) The Civil Code (1804) The Empire The Motion to Make Bonaparte a Hereditary Ruler (1804) Napoleon's New Nobility (1807) Why the French Submitted to Napoleon's Rule The Restoration Louis XVIII's Constitutional Charter (1814) Reactionary Europe (1820) Great Britain and European Reaction (1820) CHAPTER SEVEN: TOWARD THE HAITIAN REVOLUTION Abolitionist Sentiment in Pre-Revolutionary France The Society of the Friends of the Blacks (1788) The Beginning of the French Revolution The Planter's Fears of Revolutionary Radicalism (1789) Planter Grievances and Aspirations (1789) A Planter Pamphlet (1789) Divisions Among Whites (1789) The Atlantic Merchants Weigh In (1789) The Colonial Order Rips Itself Apart (1791) Free People of Color The Free People of Color Enter the Scene (1789) The Abbe Gregoire Intervenes (1789) The Assembly Debates Equality for the Free People of Color The Colonial Committee's Initial Approach (1790) Abbe Gregoire, Letter to the Lovers of Humanity (1790) The Debate Over Race and Citizenship (1791) The Jamaicans React (1791) The French Reaction: The Political Right (1791) The French Reaction: The Political Left (1791) CHAPTER EIGHT: EMANCIPATION AND INDEPENDENCE Emancipation Sonthonax's Emancipation Proclamation (1793) The National Convention Ratifies Emancipation (1794) Post-Emancipation Polverel's Labor Regulations (1794-94) Toussaint Louverture's Labor Regulations (1800) Toussaint's Constitution (1801) Napoleon's Expedition The Fate of Louisiana (1802) The Fate of the French Expedition (1801) Defining the Meaning of Independence Declaration of Independence and Abjuration of the French Nation (1804) A Black Republic (1804) Foreign Reactions to Haitian Independence (1804) African American Reactions (1827) Independent Haiti Haiti in 1807 Haiti in 1826 Colonial Fears of Haiti (1812) Haiti As Sanctuary (1817) CHAPTER NINE: THE STRUGGLES FOR LATIN AMERICAN INDEPENDENCE Forerunners of Independence Count de Aranda's Secret Report to King Carlos III Juan Pablo Viscardo y Guzman, Letter to the Spanish Americans (1810) Francisco de Miranda, Draft Constitution for Spanish America (late 1790s) The Napoleonic Wars and Latin American Indpendence Proclamation of King Joseph to the Spanish Americans (1809) Francisco Martinez Marina, Theory of Cortes (1813) Colonial Representation in the Cortes (1810) Manifesto to the Mexican People from Their Representatives to the Cortes (1813) Declaring Independence Venezuelan Declaration of Independence (1811) Argentinian Independence Implied (1811) Mexican Declaration of Independence (1813) Mexican Independence (1810-1815) Excommunications fo Hidalgo (1810) Hidalgo's Manifesto against His Excommunication (1810) Morelos, Sentiments of the Nation (1813) The Rise, Fall, and Rebirth of Latin American Independence Bolivar's Proclamation of War to the Death (1813) Bolivar's Jamaica Letter (1815) Bolivarian Naval Dominance (1818) Roussin, Report on Venezuela and New Granada (1820) State of Revolution in South America (1818) CHAPTER TEN: THE CONTOURS OF INDEPENDENCE A New World of Republics? Bolivar, Angostura Address (1819) Mexico Achieves Independence Address of Colonel Quiroga to Ferdinand VII (1820) Plan of Iguala (1821) Brazilian Independence Manifesto of the Prince Regent to the People of Brazil (1822) Latin American Independence and the Atlantic Powers Circular of Spain to the European Government (1817) Canning's Memorandum to the Cabinet on Spanish American Policy (1822) The Polignac Memorandum (1823) Monroe Doctrine (1823) Latin American Criticism of the Monroe Doctrine Bernardo Monteagudo, Essay on the Need for a General Federation between the Hispano-American States (1824) CONCLUSION

Zusätzliche Informationen

GOR013669071
9780199897964
0199897964
The Revolutionary Atlantic: Republican Visions, 1760-1830: A Documentary History Rafe Blaufarb (Professor, Professor, Florida State University)
Gebraucht - Sehr Gut
Broschiert
Oxford University Press Inc
20170511
528
N/A
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