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The Physiocrats and the World of the Enlightenment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 325

The Physiocrats and the World of the Enlightenment

Offers a framework for understanding physiocratic theory and the development of modern economics.

The Politics of Fiscal Privilege in Provence, 1530s-1830s
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 318

The Politics of Fiscal Privilege in Provence, 1530s-1830s

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2012-03-05
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  • Publisher: CUA Press

Rafe Blaufarb examines the interwoven problems of taxation and social privilege in this treatment of the contention over fiscal privilege between the seigneurial nobility and the tax-payers of Provence

The Cambridge History of the Age of Atlantic Revolutions: Volume 2, France, Europe, and Haiti
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 896

The Cambridge History of the Age of Atlantic Revolutions: Volume 2, France, Europe, and Haiti

Volume II covers the revolutions of France, Europe, and Haiti, with particular focus on the French and Haitian Revolutions and the changes they wrought. An important reference text for historians of the Atlantic World with a keen interest in Europe.

A Not-So-New World
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 264

A Not-So-New World

When Samuel de Champlain founded the colony of Quebec in 1608, he established elaborate gardens where he sowed French seeds he had brought with him and experimented with indigenous plants that he found in nearby fields and forests. Following Champlain's example, fellow colonists nurtured similar gardens through the Saint Lawrence Valley and Great Lakes region. In A Not-So-New World, Christopher Parsons observes how it was that French colonists began to learn about Native environments and claimed a mandate to cultivate vegetation that did not differ all that much from that which they had left behind. As Parsons relates, colonists soon discovered that there were limits to what they could accom...

The Economic Turn
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 783

The Economic Turn

  • Type: Book
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  • Published: 2019-01-16
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  • Publisher: Anthem Press

The mid-eighteenth century witnessed what might be dubbed an economic turn that resolutely changed the trajectory of world history. The discipline of economics itself emerged amidst this turn, and it is frequently traced back to the work of François Quesnay and his school of Physiocracy. Though lionized by the subsequent historiography of economics, the theoretical postulates and policy consequences of Physiocracy were disastrous at the time, resulting in a veritable subsistence trauma in France. This galvanized relentless and diverse critiques of the doctrine not only in France but also throughout the European world that have, hitherto, been largely neglected by scholars. Though Physiocracy was an integral part of the economic turn, it was rapidly overcome, both theoretically and practically, with durable and important consequences for the history of political economy. The Economic Turn brings together some of the leading historians of that moment to fundamentally recast our understanding of the origins and diverse natures of political economy in the Enlightenment.

Free Trade and its Enemies in France, 1814–1851
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 299

Free Trade and its Enemies in France, 1814–1851

The first full examination of the 'protectionist turn' of French liberalism in the early stages of nineteenth-century globalisation.

Economistes and the Reinvention of Empire
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 313

Economistes and the Reinvention of Empire

A rich intellectual history of the reinvention of France's colonial empire in the second half of the eighteenth century.

Compass of Society
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 409

Compass of Society

Compass of Society rethinks the French route to a conception of 'commercial society' in the seventeenth and eighteenth centuries. Henry C. Clark finds that the development of market liberalism, far from being a narrow and abstract ideological episode, was part of a broad-gauged attempt to address a number of perceived problems generic to Europe and particular to France during this period. In the end, he offers a neo-Tocquevillian account of a topic which Tocqueville himself notoriously underemphasized, namely the emergence of elements of a modern economy in eighteenth century France and the place this development had in explaining the failure of the Old Regime and the onset of the Revolution. Compass of Society will aid in understanding the conflicted French engagement with liberalism even up to the twenty-first century.

The Enlightenment
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 222

The Enlightenment

What was the Enlightenment? Though many scholars have attempted to solve this riddle, none has made as much use of contemporary answers as Dan Edelstein does here. In seeking to recover where, when, and how the concept of “the Enlightenment” first emerged, Edelstein departs from genealogies that trace it back to political and philosophical developments in England and the Dutch Republic. According to Edelstein, by the 1720s scholars and authors in France were already employing a constellation of terms—such as l’esprit philosophique—to describe what we would today call the Enlightenment. But Edelstein argues that it was within the French Academies, and in the context of the Quarrel of the Ancients and the Moderns, that the key definition, concepts, and historical narratives of the Enlightenment were crafted. A necessary corrective to many of our contemporary ideas about the Enlightenment, Edelstein’s book turns conventional thinking about the period on its head. Concise, clear, and contrarian, The Enlightenment will be welcomed by all teachers and students of the period.

Nature in the Global South
  • Language: en
  • Pages: 444

Nature in the Global South

DIVAlternative cultural forms of environmentalism in South and Southeast Asia./div