Introduction
Chapter 1: The Ancien Regime, Its Critics and Supporters
Chapter 2: The Financial Crisis
Chapter 3: The Estates General and the General Assembly
Chapter 4: Creating the New Regime
Chapter 5: Polarization and the Flight to Varennes
Chapter 6: The Failure of Constitutional Government
Chapter 7: The Convention
Chapter 8: Terror and War
Chapter 9: Thermidor and the Directory
Sylvia Neely is associate professor of history at Pennsylvania State University.
Neely combines in one slim volume a clear narrative history with
analysis and a few judicious forays into the thickets of
revolutionary historiography. An invaluable resource—a good basic
text for a survey course, and an outstanding text for
professionals. Highly recommended.
*CHOICE*
A thoughtful, well-written introduction to the Revolution.
*Journal of Social History*
A welcome addition to the growing number of short textbook
treatments of the French Revolution. Instructors offering
undergraduate courses on the subject will want to consider adopting
this text for the classroom. It is a serious effort to concisely
summarize a complex historical event. The text presupposes no prior
knowledge of the French Revolution, is written in clear,
approachable prose, and is enhanced by easily readable grayscale
maps, refreshingly new images, and a detailed timeline.
*H-France Review*
This is an engaging and thought-provoking introduction to one of
the most remarkable periods in human history. Skillfully relating
her story within the context of recent scholarly debates, Sylvia
Neely has furnished an account of the French Revolution that
seamlessly integrates social, cultural, and intellectual forces
with the play of individual personality. Her book is especially
rewarding in its explication of the international geopolitical
framework in which the Revolution unfolded and in its analysis of
the ebb and flow of revolutionary political struggles.
*Barry M. Shapiro, Allegheny College*
This superb book is exactly what I have been looking for as a text
to cover the French Revolution. The writing is engaging and the
presentation of the events and people of the revolution clear and
informative.
*Robert Bruce, Sam Houston State University*
Neely provides an excellent introduction to the French Revolution,
showing how particular political choices led to reform, revolution,
terror, and dictatorship. Political issues are placed in their
social context, but politicians emerge as individuals forced to
make difficult decisions, which led to unintended consequences
that, taken together, defined the trajectory of the Revolution.
*Thomas Kselman, University of Notre Dame*
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