Volume I
Introduction
The Sources
Note on the Text
Text of Volume I: The Bastille
Notes
Volume II
Text of Volume II: The Constitution
Notes and Appendices
Volume III
Text of Volume III: The Guillotine
Notes and Appendices
Mark Cumming is a Professor of English Literature at Memorial
University, Newfoundland. He is the editor of The Carlyle
Encyclopedia (2004), and author of A Disimprisoned Epic: Form and
Vision in Carlyle's French Revolution (1988), as well as several
articles on Carlyle's theory and practice of history. He served as
editor of Carlyle Studies Annual from 1999-2004.
David R. Sorensen is Professor of English at Saint Joseph's
University, Philadelphia. He has published extensively on Thomas
Carlyle and is a senior editor of the Duke-Edinburgh Collected
Letters of Thomas and Jane Welsh Carlyle (1970-ongoing, 46 vols.).
His most recent work is an edited edition of Thomas Carlyle's The
French Revolution for Oxford World's Classics (2019), with Brent E.
Kinser and Mark Engel. He is co-editor of Carlyle Studies Annual
and a co-founder
of the Victorian Lives and Letters Consortium (2011), a digital
repository of Victorian life-writing.
Professional editor and independent classical scholar, Mark Engel
was born in Los Angeles, and educated at Palisades High School and
the Santa Cruz campus of the University of California. With Michael
K. Goldberg and Joel J. Brattin, he edited On Heroes, Hero-Worship,
and the Heroic in History (1993), working through the many 19th
century editions, to establish the authorized critical text, which
is documented in the Note on the Text and the hefty textual
apparatus. With Rodger L.
Tarr, he edited Sartor Resartus (2000), again leading the
painstaking collation and discussion of variants that produced the
authorized critical text, which is fully documented. A lifelong
friend and colleague of
Gregory Bateson, he compiled and edited the paperback edition of
Steps to an Ecology of Mind. Mark Engel also served on the
International Bateson Institute Board until his death in December
2017. Working with David R. Sorensen and Mark Cumming, Mark Engel
established the text of The French Revolution. Brent E. Kinser is
Professor of English at Western Carolina University, North
Carolina. He has published extensively on Thomas Carlyle and is the
author of The American Civil War and the
Shaping of British Democracy (2011) as well as the co-editor (with
David R. Sorensen) of Carlyle's On Heroes and Hero-Worship (2013).
He is also co-editor of Carlyle Studies Annual (2006--) and a
founding
director of The Victorian Lives and Letters Consortium (2012--).
The French Revolution has now been reissued in three handsome
volumes by Oxford University Press. . . Mark Cumming and David R
Sorensen, the editors of the new edition . . . remark on the
inconsistency of Carlyle's prose in this history: 'Telling the
story of the French Revolution forced Carlyle to draw on hall his
strengths as a writer.' . . . The French Revolution is a work that
one struggles to get through yet feels well rewarded for having
done so. Its author . . . remains one of the strangest figures in
English literature, a persistent moralist, obdurate in his
opinions, not always intelligible, yet, somehow, indispensable.
*Joseph Epstein, Commentary*
...features a fine introduction to Carlyle's life and work.
Carlyle's prose is thick with allusions to Homer, Virgil,
Shakespeare, Milton, "The Pilgrim's Progress" and especially the
Bible; all are deftly referenced here. Moreover, Carlyle was
writing only four decades after the revolution and assumed far more
familiarity with its names and events than today's readers are
likely to possess. This edition makes the work decipherable in ways
it otherwise isn't.
*Wall Street Journal*
A monumental undertaking, this comprehensive scholarly edition of
Thomas Carlyle's The French Revolution appears in three volumes,
each with an extensive apparatus of notes. [...] In the notes, the
editors track in detail Carlyle's many sources, revealing that the
author—contrary to received opinion—was indeed deeply engaged with
his sources and that his range was broad. Among the text's generous
offerings are a lucid explanation of its editorial policies,
appendixes of related texts, a chronological summary of the
revolution's course, a meticulous list of emendations, and a useful
index.
*Awards committee, Modern Languages Association*
This magnificent edition is a worthy monument to Carlyle's genius.
Its scholarship appears faultless.
*Simon Heffer, New Criterion*
By any standards, the achievement of the three editors is both
extraordinary and exemplary. Behind this comprehensive scholarly
edition of Carlyle's history of the French Revolution, based on a
newly edited critical text of the 1837 publication in three
volumes, lie decades of collaborative scholarship, assisted by
generous institutional support. [...] In short, these three volumes
stand as a fitting tribute to the scholars who have collaborated
and to Carlyle for a heroic attempt to capture the kaleidoscopic
and ever-changing nature of an event whose echoes continue to
reverberate.
*David Paroissien, Dickens Quarterly*
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