Writing Revolution: Representation, Rhetoric, and Revolutionary Politics

Writing Revolution: Representation, Rhetoric, and Revolutionary Politics

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  • Author: Sheila Delany
  • Publisher: BRILL
  • ISBN: 9004684093
  • Category : Social Science
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 206

Revolutionary and writer: how do they fit together in one person’s work? Using literary texts from French, German, Russian and American pro-revolutionary writers, Sheila Delany examines the synergy of politics and rhetoric, art and social commitment. The writers she considers gave voice to the hopes of their time. Some led the events in person as well as through their writing; others worked to build a movement. Marx, Engels, Lenin, Trotsky, Luxemburg, Mao, Sylvain Maréchal, Boris Lavrenov, Bertolt Brecht and others are here: consummate rhetoricians all, not necessarily on the same page politically but for the revolutions of their day.


The Rhetoric of Historical Representation

The Rhetoric of Historical Representation

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  • Author: Ann Rigney
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN: 9780521530682
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 212

The role which narrative discourse plays in the writing of history is an area of increasing interest to historians and literary theorists, resulting in some of the most stimulating and controversial historiographical work in recent years. The rhetoric of historical representation represents one of the first attempts to carry out a sustained textual analysis of historiographical practice. Ann Rigney focusses on three celebrated nineteenth-century histories of the French Revolution, written by Alphonse de Lamartine, Jules Michelet and Louis Blanc. What distinguishes her account is the sensitivity and sophistication with which she handles the semiotic issues each text raises. She shows how a greater understanding of the specific features of historical narration can be achieved through a comparative analysis of the different representations of a common event. This fresh new perspective on a long-standing historiographical debate brings into relief the ways in which the narrative medium can be used to invest events with one significance rather than another.


Language and Political Meaning in Revolutionary America

Language and Political Meaning in Revolutionary America

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  • Author: John R. Howe
  • Publisher: Univ of Massachusetts Press
  • ISBN:
  • Category : American prose literature
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 304

Between the Declaration of Independence and the federal constitution, the American revolutionary generation produced an enormous body of writing on political matters. The author offers a reassessment of the way America's founders used and understood the language of politics.


Language and Rhetoric of the Revolution

Language and Rhetoric of the Revolution

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  • Author: Institut français d'Ecosse
  • Publisher: Edinburgh : Edinburgh University Press
  • ISBN:
  • Category : France
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 134


Women Write Back

Women Write Back

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  • Author: Stephanie Mathilde Hilger
  • Publisher: Rodopi
  • ISBN: 9042025786
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 177

Women Write Back explores the late eighteenth- and early nineteenth-century women's responses to texts written by well-known Enlightment figures. Hilger investigates the authorial strategies employed by Karoline von Günderrode, Ellis Cornelia Knight, Julie de Krüdener, and Helen Maria Williams, whose works engage Voltaire's Mahomet, Johnson's Rasselas, Goethe's Werther, and Rousseau's Julie. The analysis of these women's texts sheds light on the literary culture of a period that deemed itself not only enlightened but also egalitarian.


Writing Revolution

Writing Revolution

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  • Author: Peter J. Bellis
  • Publisher: University of Georgia Press
  • ISBN: 0820334618
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 234

In recent years, formalist and deconstructive approaches to literary studies have been under attack, charged by critics with isolating texts as distinctive aesthetic or linguistic objects, separate from their social and historical contexts. Historicist and cultural approaches have often responded by simply reversing the picture, reducing texts to no more than superstructural effects of historical or ideological forces. In Writing Revolution, Peter J. Bellis explores the ways in which literature can engage with—rather than escape from or obscure—social and political issues. Bellis argues that a number of nineteenth-century American writers, including Nathaniel Hawthorne, Henry David Thoreau, and Walt Whitman, saw their texts as spaces where alternative social and cultural possibilities could be suggested and explored. All writing in the same historical moment, Bellis's subjects were responding to the same cluster of issues: the need to redefine American identity after the Revolution, the problem of race slavery, and the growing industrialization of American society. Hawthorne, Bellis contends, sees the romance as "neutral territory" where the Imaginary and the Actual—the aesthetic and the historical—can interpenetrate and address crucial issues of class, race, and technological modernity. Whitman conceives of Leaves of Grass as a transformative democratic space where all forms of meditation, both political and literary, are swept away. Thoreau oscillates between these two approaches. Walden, like the romance, aims to fashion a mediating space between nature and society. His abolitionist essays, however, shift sharply away from both linguistic representation and the political, toward an apocalyptic cleansing violence. In addition to covering selected works by Hawthorne, Whitman, and Thoreau, Bellis also examines powerful works of social and political critique by Louisa May Alcott and Margaret Fuller. With its suggestions for new ways of reading antebellum American writing, Writing Revolution breaks through the thickets of contemporary literary discourse and will spark debate in the literary community.


Writing Revolution

Writing Revolution

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  • Author: Matthew Cassel
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing
  • ISBN: 085773329X
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 215

From Cairo to Damascus and from Tunisia to Bahrain, Layla Al-Zubaidi and Matthew Cassel have brought together some of the most exciting new writing born out of revolution in the Arab world. This is a remarkable collection of testimony, entirely composed by participants in, and witnesses to, the profound changes shaking their region. Situated between past, present and future - in a space where the personal and the political collide - these voices are part of an ongoing process, one that is at once hopeful and heartbreaking. Unique amongst material emanating from and about the convulsions in the Arab Middle East, these creative and original writers speak of history, determination and struggle, as well as of political and poetic engagement with questions of identity and activism. This book gives a moving and inspiring insight into the Arab revolutions and uprisings: why they are happening and what might come next.


Thomas Paine and the Literature of Revolution

Thomas Paine and the Literature of Revolution

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  • Author: Edward Larkin
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN: 1139445987
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 217

Although the impact of works such as Common Sense and The Rights of Man has led historians to study Thomas Paine's role in the American Revolution and political scientists to evaluate his contributions to political theory, scholars have tacitly agreed not to treat him as a literary figure. This book not only redresses this omission, but also demonstrates that Paine's literary sensibility is particularly evident in the very texts that confirmed his importance as a theorist. And yet, because of this association with the 'masses', Paine is often dismissed as a mere propagandist. Thomas Paine and the Literature of Revolution recovers Paine as a transatlantic popular intellectual who would translate the major political theories of the eighteenth century into a language that was accessible and appealing to ordinary citizens on both sides of the Atlantic.


A Rhetoric of Bourgeois Revolution

A Rhetoric of Bourgeois Revolution

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  • Author: William H. Sewell (Jr.)
  • Publisher: Duke University Press
  • ISBN: 9780822315384
  • Category : History
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 252

What Is the Third Estate? was the most influential pamphlet of 1789. It did much to set the French Revolution on a radically democratic course. It also launched its author, the Abbé Sieyes, on a remarkable political career that spanned the entire revolutionary decade. Sieyes both opened the revolution by authoring the National Assembly's declaration of sovereignty in June of 1789 and closed it in 1799 by engineering Napoleon Bonaparte's coup d'état. This book studies the powerful rhetoric of the great pamphlet and the brilliant but enigmatic thought of its author. William H. Sewell's insightful analysis reveals the fundamental role played by the new discourse of political economy in Sieyes's thought and uncovers the strategies by which this gifted rhetorician gained the assent of his intended readers--educated and prosperous bourgeois who felt excluded by the nobility in the hierarchical social order of the old regime. He also probes the contradictions and incoherencies of the pamphlet's highly polished text to reveal fissures that reach to the core of Sieyes's thought--and to the core of the revolutionary project itself. Combining techniques of intellectual history and literary analysis with a deep understanding of French social and political history, Sewell not only fashions an illuminating portrait of a crucial political document, but outlines a fresh perspective on the history of revolutionary political culture.


Representative Words

Representative Words

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  • Author: Thomas Gustafson
  • Publisher: Cambridge University Press
  • ISBN: 9780521395120
  • Category : Literary Criticism
  • Languages : en
  • Pages : 500

Thomas Gustafson examines how and why Americans renewed and developed the tradition of writing connecting political disorders and the corruption of language between the ages of the Revolutionary and the Civil Wars.