Opinions, please...?
May. 19th, 2007 10:46 pmOkay, so I was at the Barnes and Noble at the mall today and saw this on display. It's called Liberty: The Lives and Times of Six Women in Revolutionary France by Lucy Moore.
So has anyone read it or is reading it, and is it good?
I don't think it seems too biased, as she does seem to cover women revolutionaries, looking at the contents, and surprisingly, doesn't give a spotlight to Marie-Antoinette.
So has anyone read it or is reading it, and is it good?
I don't think it seems too biased, as she does seem to cover women revolutionaries, looking at the contents, and surprisingly, doesn't give a spotlight to Marie-Antoinette.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-20 04:56 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-20 05:41 pm (UTC)Meanwhile, to fit the author's thesis that the rather wide group of "Jacobins" were anti-women, she refuses to acknowledge that any women supported any Montagnard, from Danton, to Marat, to Robespierre, to Hébert. Which is just ridiculous--ignoring these women doesn't make then disappear.
And this is far from the only instance in which she twists evidence to suit her purposes. While she goes on about "Robespierre, ruthlessness of"--for which her only source is Furet--she completely ignores the people Tallien had massacred in Bordeaux because he is in love with her heroine, and God forbid the man who overthrew Robespierre (also referred to as "the high priest of a sect") could ever do anything wrong.
The bottom line is, you would expect to find this kind of lurid, biased, and picturesque history in a book from the 19th century, not from a supposedly "serious historian" in the early 21st.
no subject
Date: 2007-05-21 10:27 am (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-21 04:03 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-22 11:04 pm (UTC)no subject
Date: 2007-05-23 05:34 am (UTC)