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"Memoirs to Illustrate the History of My Time - Volume I" from Francois Pierre Guillaume Guizot. French historian, orator, and statesman (1787-1874)."
In response to the reactionary arguments of ultra-royalists, Francois Guizot (1787-1874) showed that aristocratic social conditions had gone for ever. The growth of towns and a market economy had forged the bourgeoisie and created a 'democratic' (or capitalist) society based on individual rights. Yet in France, if not in England, this just and inevitable process had been accompanied by the destruction of local autonomy and the creation of an overpowerful state bureaucracy. The History stresses the role of class conflict as a catalyst for social change, and the energizing effect of Europe's plural traditions (Roman, Christian and Germanic). Such themes, argues Siedentop, deeply influenced the thinking of his three great contemporaries Tocqueville, Marx and Mill, revealing Guizot as both 'the key to an epoch' and 'the most trenchant historical mind of the nineteenth century'.
Monsieur Guizot's "Democracy in France" gives a thorough evaluation of the political scene and the evolution of democracy in France throughout the 19th century. As a famous French historian and politician, Guizot uses his firsthand information and intellectual acumen to study the demanding situations and successes of France's maturing democratic gadget. The book is probably to dig into historical context, examining the effect of most important activities, revolutions, and social adjustments at the French political system. Guizot's approach can also offer an extra comprehensive understanding of the reasons that fashioned French democracy, such as as tensions among monarchy and republicanism, ...
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This is a study of what it means, both strategically and intellectually, to take the center position in politics. The two specific political centers considered are the efforts in France and England after the Napoleonic Wars to establish middle class rule as a permanent center, or "juste milieu "between the extremes of revolution and reaction. The four prototypical political thinkers examined are Pierre Paul Royer-Collard and Francois Pierre Guillaume Guizot in France, and the English reform Whigs, Henry Peter Brougham and Thomas Babington Macaulay. Starzinger carefully explains his choice of these critical figures, emphasizing in his new introduction a current climate of opinion that is far ...