Cosmopolitan Patriots
Americans in Paris in the Age of Revolution
Format:Hardback
Publisher:University of Virginia Press
Published:28th Feb '10
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This truly transnational history reveals the important role of Americans abroad in the Age of Revolution, as well as providing an early example of the limits of American influence on other nations. From the beginning of the French Revolution to its end at the hands of Napoleon, American cosmopolitans like Thomas Jefferson, Gouverneur Morris, Thomas Paine, Joel Barlow, and James Monroe drafted constitutions, argued over violent means and noble ends, confronted sudden regime changes, and negotiated diplomatic crises such as the XYZ Affair and the Louisiana Purchase. Eager to report on what they regarded as universal political ideals and practices. Americans again and again confronted the particular circumstances of a foreign nation in turmoil. In turn, what they witnessed in Paris caused these prominent Americans to reflect on the condition and prospects of their own republic. Thus, their individual stories highlight overlooked parallels between the nation-building process in both France and America, and the two countries' common struggle to reconcile the rights of man with their own national identities.
"There is much to praise in Cosmopolitan Patriots. The clarity of the writing and the originality make it a pleasure to read. This is a terrific book, remarkable in its mastery of both American and French history. Cosmopolitan Patriots is smart, original, and important and makes a significant contribution to our understanding of the age of the democratic revolution." - Jan Ellen Lewis, Rutgers University "By focusing on the experiences and attendant anxieties, thrills, and frustrations of a small number of highly literate Americans residing in Paris in the 1790s, Philipp Ziesche offers us a fresh vantage point for considering a classic historical question: what was the relationship between the American and French Revolutions? Cosmopolitan Patriots eschews simplistic answers and, in fascinating detail, reveals nation-building as a complex process that posed similar problems of inclusion and exclusion on both sides of the eighteenth-century Atlantic world." - Sophia Rosenfeld, University of Virginia, author of A Revolution in Language: The Problem of Signs in Late Eighteenth-Century France"
ISBN: 9780813928913
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Weight: unknown