22645303
9780691056999
In a wide-ranging interpretation of French thought in the years 1670-1789, Daniel Gordon takes us through the literature of manners and moral philosophy, theology and political theory, universal history and economics to show how French thinkers sustained a sense of liberty and dignity within an authoritarian regime. A penetrating critique of those who exaggerate either the radicalism of the Enlightenment or the hegemony of the absolutist state, his book documents the invention of an ethos that was neither democratic nor absolutist, an ethos that idealized communication and private life. The key to this ethos was "sociability, " and Gordon offers the first detailed study of the language and ideas that gave this concept its meaning in the Old Regime."Citizens without Sovereignty provides a wealth of information about the origins and usage of key words, such as "societe and "sociabilite, in French thought. From semantic fields of meaning, Gordon goes on to consider institutional fields of action. Focusing on the ubiquitous idea of "society" as a depoliticized sphere of equality, virtue, and aesthetic cultivation, he marks out the philDaniel Gordon is the author of 'Citizens without Sovereignty', published 1994 under ISBN 9780691056999 and ISBN 0691056994.
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