War, Republican Militarism and the Reimagining of Republican Revolution in the Paris Commune of 1871
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War, Republican Militarism and the Reimagining of Republican Revolution in the Paris Commune of 1871
Annotation
PII
S207987840009315-5-1
Publication type
Article
Status
Published
Authors
Gavin Murray-Miller 
Affiliation:
Cardiff University
State Academic University for the Humanities
Abstract

This article examines the relationship between war, revolution, and citizenship during the Paris Commune of 1871. The event marked a moment in which French radicals began to rethink the nation’s revolutionary heritage as they proposed alternative models for a reconstituted republican government and society. War and military conflict were important factors in these ideological considerations, especially as radical republicans grappled with concepts of offensive and defensive revolutionary strategies. As this article suggests, these arguments came to inform novel ideas regarding republican citizenship and state institutions, demonstrating that the civil war of 1871 was conceptualized as a turning point in France’s revolutionary tradition in the 19th century.

Keywords
history, France, Paris Commune of 1871, ideology, republicanism
Received
20.10.2019
Publication date
12.06.2020
Number of characters
48133
Number of purchasers
35
Views
1580
Readers community rating
0.0 (0 votes)
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