About This Book
The author traces the rise and consolidation of a radical revolutionary regime, examining how Jacobin ideology and staged public rituals mobilized delegates and public opinion to justify centralized power and repression. He outlines the Jacobin program's aims to remold citizens through state intervention, analyzes key leaders' psychology and rival factions, and describes institutions that implemented terror, from committees to provincial commissars. Chapters consider social consequences for clergy, bourgeois notables, and municipal elites, and argue that promises of equality and regeneration produced administrative despotism and systematic political violence.
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