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Reimagining Society in Eighteenth-Century French Literature

Book

Reimagining Society in Eighteenth-Century French Literature

DOI link for Reimagining Society in Eighteenth-Century French Literature

Reimagining Society in Eighteenth-Century French Literature book

Happiness and Human Rights

Reimagining Society in Eighteenth-Century French Literature

DOI link for Reimagining Society in Eighteenth-Century French Literature

Reimagining Society in Eighteenth-Century French Literature book

Happiness and Human Rights
ByJonas Ross Kjærgård
Edition 1st Edition
First Published 2018
eBook Published 19 June 2018
Pub. Location New York
Imprint Routledge
DOI https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429465260
Pages 238
eBook ISBN 9780429465260
Subjects Humanities, Language & Literature
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Kjærgård, J.R. (2018). Reimagining Society in Eighteenth-Century French Literature: Happiness and Human Rights (1st ed.). Routledge. https://doi.org/10.4324/9780429465260

ABSTRACT

The French revolutionary shift from monarchical to popular sovereignty came clothed in a new political language, a significant part of which was a strange coupling of happiness and rights. In Old Regime ideology, Frenchmen were considered subjects who had no need of understanding why what was prescribed to them would be in the interest of their happiness. The 1789 Declaration of the Rights of Man and of the Citizen equipped the French with a list of inalienable rights and if society would respect those rights, the happiness of all would materialize.

This volume explores the authors of fictional literature who contributed alongside pamphleteers, politicians, and philosophers to the establishment of this new political arena, filled with sometimes vague, yet insisting notions of happiness and rights. The shift from monarchical to popular sovereignty and the corollary transition from subjects to citizens culminated in the summer of 1789 but it was preceded by an immense piece of imaginative work.

TABLE OF CONTENTS

chapter |21 pages

Introduction

chapter 1|31 pages

The Unfinished Declaration

chapter 2|40 pages

What Was Literature?

chapter 3|36 pages

Louis-Sébastien Mercier and the Dream of a Happy Future

chapter 4|35 pages

The Search for Order in Choderlos de Laclos’s Liaisons dangereuses

chapter 5|37 pages

The Regeneration of the State in Marie-Joseph Chénier’s Fénelon ou les religieuses de Cambrai

chapter |7 pages

Conclusion

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