For those who lived in the wake of the French Revolution, from
the storming of the Bastille to Napoleon's final defeat, its
aftermath left a profound wound that no subsequent king, emperor,
or president could heal. "Children of the Revolution" follows the
ensuing generations who repeatedly tried and failed to come up with
a stable regime after the trauma of 1789. The process encouraged
fresh and often murderous oppositions between those who were for,
and those who were against, the Revolution's values. Bearing the
scars of their country's bloody struggle, and its legacy of deeply
divided loyalties, the French lived the long nineteenth century in
the shadow of the revolutionary age.
Despite the ghosts raised in this epic tale, Robert Gildea has
written a richly engaging and provocative book. His is a strikingly
unfamiliar France, a country with an often overwhelming gap between
Paris and the provinces, a country torn apart by fratricidal
hatreds and a tortured history of feminism, the site of political
catastrophes and artistic triumphs, and a country that
managed--despite a pervasive awareness of its own fall from
grace--to fix itself squarely at the heart of modernity. Indeed,
Gildea reveals how the collective recognition of the great costs of
the Revolution galvanized the French to achieve consensus in a new
republic and to integrate the tumultuous past into their sense of
national identity. It was in this spirit that France's young men
went to the front in World War I with a powerful sense of national
confidence and purpose.
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