Becoming a Revolutionary

The Deputies of the French National Assembly and the Emergence of a Revolutionary Culture

No cover

Timothy Tackett: Becoming a Revolutionary (2014, Princeton University Press)

374 pages

English language

Published Jan. 9, 2014 by Princeton University Press.

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2 stars (1 review)

4 editions

It was hard not to fall asleep.

2 stars

The readability of this book is... minimal. If you've ever wondered what an inventory (or a budget, a list of quotes, or a CV/resume) would look like if someone had turned it into a narrative, it would be this. It becomes cumbersome to even focus as you're told the individual wealth of each deputy, of their so-called qualifications, of their (possible) relationship to either Rousseau or Voltaire... It's exhausting, and it would make a great case study of why historians should learn to write for an audience (and I'm saying this as someone who also studied and taught history).

It's frustrating because a lot of the information could be interesting, but you have to slog through a lot of stuff that could've been better outlined as a table or a chart.

Subjects

  • Enlightenment
  • France, history, revolution, 1789-1799, causes
  • Political culture
  • Legislators