Introduction: Revisiting the Intellectual Transformation of
Nineteenth-Century France
1: Between Republicanism and Positivism: Emile Littré and the
Founding of The Third Republic
2: Centralist Defender of the State: The Eclectic Republicanism of
Charles Dupont-White
3: From Democratic Advocate to Monarchist Critic of the Republic:
The Ambiguous Republicanism of Etienne Vacherot
4: A Republican Saint-Simonist: Eugène Pelletan and the
Transformation of Nineteenth-Century Republicanism
5: Neo-Kantian Moralist and Activist: Jules Barni and the
Establishment of the Municipalist Republic
Conclusion: The Origins of the Third Republic Reconsidered
`Review from previous edition The most fascinating aspect of this
closely analysed volume, that will be a treasure trove for
specialists, are the numerous illustrations of continuity in
liberal thought throughout the nineteenth century.'
English Historical Review
`Sudhir Hazareesingh is to be congratulated on expanding from his
previous work on the under-studied Second Empire to the early years
of the Third Republic, with a backward glance to the pre-1851
decades. He has added a distinctive interpretation of the French
version of republicanism that is markedly different from its rival
Anglo-American affiliation with liberalism...Wide-ranging and close
scrutiny of the texts ... By his subtlety of analysis and
sustained sensitivity to nuance and complexity, steering the reader
circumspectly through the shoals of improvised theory and
intransigent practice, we are treated to a closely documented
scrutiny of a liberal
republicanism groping its way towards a consensual Republic.'
History of Political Thought
`Honest and erudite.'
Political Studies
`Challenges many of the pieties of standard accounts of the
evolution of the republican tradition ... important revisionist
work.'
Times Literary Supplement
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