ABSTRACT

This book, first published in 2000, uses interpretations of the French Revolution as a model to ask what history meant to Victorian Britain, how events became enshrined with the authority of history, and how such cultural assumptions might help us to read nineteenth-century British literature. By examining reactions to French revolution in a broad selection of texts, this book explores how the Victorians responded to developments in France in historical terms, repeatedly comparing new events to the touchstone of the first French Revolution, yet always with the goal of finding ways to understand Britain’s own past, present and future.

chapter |32 pages

Introduction

chapter Chapter 1|30 pages

Burkean Prophecy and the July Revolution

chapter Chapter 2|36 pages

After Reform

Conservatism and Carlyle

chapter Chapter 3|36 pages

1848

The Threat to Property

chapter Chapter 4|32 pages

Historical Repetition and A Tale of Two Cities

chapter Chapter 5|32 pages

Alternative Worlds and the Franco-Prussian War

chapter |12 pages

Epilogue Dreams of a Channel Tunnel