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wolfshadow713.livejournal.com) wrote in
revolution_fr2008-08-18 05:30 pm
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Accounts of Committee meeting on March 30, '94 (when Danton's arrest was ordered)??
I know that there aren't any official minutes of the March 30 joint meeting of the Committees (or any meeting, really), but there are at least partial accounts of what transpired. Does anyone know of a relatively complete account, either from some primary source document (ie. someone's memoirs) or something pieced together by historians)?
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Or general good will because I was in Paris.Well, I don't particularly have a clear opinion on any of it (I persist in thinking Danton is a fantastic film, if not a fantastic history, but I do find it fascinating to see how various people have reacted to it) - I just honestly don't find it so 'insulting' - perhaps because to me it seems broad enough that I'm not sure who it's insulting toward. Although I sort of see the "hmm, that's interesting!" point mentioned byno subject
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Anyway, I agree with you on Danton. If I say I think it's brilliant it's more because - not that I know much about films, but - it's gorgeous and well-acted and really very clever - Wajda is definitely talented. But it does seem a little scary in retrospect that we watched it in 10th grade history. (It was actually what triggered my interest in the Revolution - so I guess I personally was not destroyed by being served Wajda in lieu of history - but so I also know what kind of impression it makes without any prior knowledge of the events!)
Ah, I think I understand better what you mean now. Right, I recall some that rubbing me the wrong way too. It does seem rather narrow-oversimplified (I expect there was a little more variation in opinions than that..) - and though of course I was not around to see what attitudes were like on the eve of the bicentennial, what he describes seems a bit.. contrary to other impressions? (It was a good book, though, by the way - I had never read Darnton and came across it by chance at the library. It's also full of deliciously nerdy stories about publishing during the Enlightenment.)
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I can see how someone knowing nothing about the Revolution--or even someone who did know something and could put it out of their mind--could appreciate "Danton"'s qualities as a film, but personally, the mutilation of history was far too distracting for me to be able to do that. >.> In general though, I think the impression people get from watching "Danton" is too often their first and last, or close to it, so it's doubtless more damaging for your average person who doesn't take a particularly strong interest in the Revolution to watch it.
I suppose I shouldn't be too hard on Darnton in particular, since there are very few American historians who don't use that patronizing kind of tone when speaking of their European, and in particular, French colleagues. Nevertheless, it's definitely lowered him in my estimation, which is always disappointing. (Doubtless it is; nerdy details on publishing are Darnton's speciality. I just wish he would have stuck to it.)
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Interestingly though - when I try to tap into my initial reactions to the film, knowing nothing of the Revolution - what I remember distinctly, which seems to disagree with what people say about it, is that I felt very sympathetic toward Robespierre - as in the scene when he's lying there sweating at the end; I think I came away with the impression that his was the character you could really understand in the end. (And I don't think it was some sort of intrinsic personal bias since I've often since been more inclined toward the Dantonists!) Obviously I don't want to suggest that everyone who sees it will share my impression; but at least I know it's possible - so I've wondered if it's primarily people who know the situation who see Robespierre as being so vilified in the film. That is quite a general statement and the reaction of a then-15-year-old american is not necessarily the best testimonial; but it would be interesting to see what the 'average person' really gets out of Danton. For myself, I've no idea exactly how I feel about it, but that's fine with me.
Yes. :( Well, I suppose I haven't yet discovered a historian for whom this was not the case. (If anyone has, I'm not sure whether I'll be impressed or wary.)
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Maybe it's a girl thing? Maybe blokes watch and go, yeah, Danton's getting pissed and fucking whores, what a mensch!
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Have you heard of the insane-sounding 5 hour musical play done in the late 80's, with James Marsters from 'Buffy' as Robespierre, who is shown screwing his sister or something like that? Gawd!
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Out of curiosity, how was the trial (if it was shown onstage) handled? If it's in there, I'd imagine it's hard to do convincingly...
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...you know, that must be it.
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I've read a few excerpts from it (the ones I could get for free online) and some of the characterization is definitely strange, probably the result of the author's obsessive fixation with Robespierre that, to my understanding, is somewhat irrelevant to the real Robespierre. I read enough to realize I should not be reading this until I finish my current project researching the trial of the indulgents lest it influence my conclusions in strange ways...
That seems to be the problem pretty much all historical fiction (and even some historical fact...) about the Revolution, or most of history. People tend to forget about the "fiction" part of "historical fiction" even though it is clearly stated in the title of the genre!
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I'd be interested to know if he (or anyone) has written at length on 'Pauvre Bitos', which is a thoroughly loathsome piece of work but I think says a hell of a lot about the times it was written in. In a way, I'm surprised, if Darnton's essay is accurate, that Robespierre was still being held in high esteem by Mitterand and co in the 80's, because I'd got the impression he kind of fell between two stools by that point - always loathed by the right, his 'purity' disconcerting to a somewhat tarnished section of the war generation, and the 68-er generation preferred the Enrages and Babeuf. In '58, his bicentennary, the French govt. very publicly refused to commemorate him.
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Yes... I can't help thinking Darnton's version seems off. If Robespierre wasn't actively being scorned, it still seems unlikely that people would be taking serious offence on his behalf over something like Danton - or that they'd be open about it, anyway...?
By the way, do you mind if I add you? It seems like you've had something awfully interesting to say every time I've come across you.
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Darnton's essay still goes much deeper than other things I've read in English on Wajda's film, which tended to be 'it's an allegory of the Solidarity movement', and left it at that, which left me thinking - if Danton's Lech Walesa, how come he's eating stuffed fish while the people queue for bread? - and Darnton does raise that point, too. The other essays on the film online are on 'Jstor', which I can't access, damnit! It's interesting reading the viewer comments on youtube, though, where there's the clip of Robespierre's speech, and imdb, because they're very mixed - some going yay George W, smash the left (err? what?) and some Go Robespierre!, and, well, all shades of opinion about it, really - it's the sign of a interesting piece of cinema, that so many people can take so many different things from it. They should use it in politics classes, though, not history, if they are showing it in schools (though I wish we'd had Franco-Polish cinema shown in our school! We did once have Derek Jarman's version of The Tempest - the teacher switched it off quickly when a bloke emerged from the sea naked! She hadn't realised - Derek Jarman, famously gay film director...
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I have not ventured into said youtube comments... hm. But it would be terrible if everybody reacted the same way, I suppose. Also I think it's something you can look at a little differently each time you see it. Well, in the end I'm glad we watched it in school - because I guess I wouldn't be here otherwise! - my teacher was a bit eccentric, and I must say I think he's very cool for showing Danton. However - I don't think he himself had considered it in so much depth, he certainly didn't mention any of that to us (although I do recall him going on about the Polish actors..) - I do think it would have been even cooler shown in some other context. Like a politics class? Too bad we had no such thing at my school, except for what passed for a course on American democracy. I don't know where Wajda would have fit in between this-is-what-pork-barrelling-is-so-never-ever-skip-jury-duty-exam-friday.