Crowds that spoke before the state could answer
Ordinary people remaking authority during the French Revolution
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- 24,99 €
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- 24,99 €
Descrição da editora
When a king calls a meeting he cannot control, the foundation of every throne trembles. France in 1789 did not begin with revolutionaries storming barricades but with a monarchy that lost the authority to govern itself. This book follows the unraveling of institutional power from Versailles to the streets of Paris, showing how the old regime collapsed less from attack than from its own internal fractures. The Estates-General became a stage where centuries of hierarchy dissolved into open conflict between orders, and the Third Estate transformed itself from subjects into representatives of a sovereign nation. Each step—the Tennis Court Oath, the fall of the Bastille, the abolition of feudal privileges—revealed a system that could no longer justify its own existence. Power did not shift from king to people in a single stroke; it drained out of every institution that once held it, leaving a vacuum into which ideology, fear, and ambition rushed. The revolution consumed those who made it, from Mirabeau to Robespierre, as the logic of popular sovereignty demanded purer and purer forms of loyalty. Across Europe, monarchs watched and learned nothing, believing the fire would not cross their borders. This book traces the mechanisms by which authority becomes legitimacy and then becomes terror, asking what happens when a society decides that everything must change at once.