|
Francois Furet Dies at 70; Historian of French Revolution
From:
The Washington Post
| Date:
July 15, 1997
| Copyright 1997 The Washington Post. This material is published under license from the Washington Post. All inquiries regarding rights should be directed to the Washington Post.Copyright information
|
Francois Furet, 70, a historian whose groundbreaking approach
to the French Revolution earned him an international reputation and
election last year to the internationally prestigious French
Academy, died July 13 at a hospital in Toulouse, France, after an
apparent stroke.
His family, who announced his death on Bastille Day, July 14,
said he was stricken after falling on his head while playing tennis
in Saint-Pierre de Toirac, a town in southwestern France. He lost
consciousness and never came out of the coma that followed.
He was best known for his "Critical Dictionary of the French ...
Related newspaper, magazine, and trade journal articles from HighBeam Research
(Including press releases, facts, information, and biographies)
|
FURTHER READING ON THE FRENCH REVOLUTION
; ...the debate over the nature of the French Revolution has been unusually fierce and protracted...44.50). A Cultural History of the French Revolution, by Emmet Kennedy (Yale University Press, $35). French Caricature and the French Revolution, 1789-1799, edited by James Cuno...
|
|
The French Revolution: the Essential Readings.(Book Review)
; ...scholarship as rich as that of the French Revolution is inherently problematic. Inevitably...teachers of advanced courses on the French Revolution now have several such volumes from...notably, Jack Censer (ed.), The French Revolution and Intellectual History (Chicago...
|
|
Stone, Bailey Reinterpreting the French Revolution: a Global-Historical Perspective.(Book Review)(Brief Article)
; ...global-historical reinterpretation of the French Revolution promises much of interest to a general...mean a statist interpretation of the French Revolution set in the context of international...military conflict. Reinterpreting the French Revolution continues Stone's approach in ...
|
|
Andress, David: the French Revolution and the People.(Book Review)
; Andress, David The French Revolution and the People London: Hambledon and...Publication Date: April 2004 In The French Revolution and the People--his third book about the French Revolution--University of Portsmouth historian...
|
|
Making Democracy in the French Revolution.(Book Review)
; ...Over two hundred years on, the French Revolution is constantly undergoing metamorphosis...insignificance in terms of modern history. The French Revolution is no longer of any significant historical...author terms the devaluation of the French Revolution has had a great impact on the ...
|
|
The British Periodical Press and the French Revolution, 1789-99
; ...Periodical Press and the French Revolution, 1789-99. London: Palgrave...In popular memory, the French Revolution was a revolution gone...popularizations of their work, the French Revolution has provided ongoing warnings...
|
|
Fifty years of rewriting the French Revolution: John Dunne signposts main landmarks and current directions in the historiographical debate. (The Unpredictable Past).
; ...its own image. In the case of the French Revolution, this is an understatement. In the...selling text book Origins of the French Revolution, which begins with a long and detailed...celebrated textbook The Coming of the French Revolution (Eng. translation, 1947; original...
|
|
Sutherland, D. M. G. The French Revolution and Empire: The Quest for a Civic Order.(Book Review)(Brief Article)
; ...Publication Date: September 2002 The French Revolution and Empire: The Quest for a Civic Order is the French Revolution demythologized. D. M. G. Sutherland...Napoleon's own expansive ego. The French Revolution and Empire is the best one-volume...
|
|
Blood Sisters: The French Revolution in Women's Memory.
; ...bibliography) by women who lived through the French Revolution. They were duchesses, ladies-in-waiting...constructs a largely negative story of the French Revolution. The women describe the death of...indicates how men remembered the French Revolution, it is hard for us to see just ...
|
|
La Liberte and the Terror; At Georgetown, the French Revolution Rages in the Minds of Men
; ...padlocked inside the sword box, the French Revolution has spent the last two days encased...International Congress on the History of the French Revolution. In their comfortable shoes and uncertain...there are ideological origins of the French Revolution ..." Analyzing the ...
|
For more facts and information,
see all results