Dr Thomas Stammers t.e.stammers@durham.ac.uk
Associate Professor
La mondialisation de la Révolution française (vers 1930-1960) : origines et eclipse d'un paradigme historiographique
Stammers, Tom
Authors
Abstract
This article sketches an alternative narrative for the origins of global historiography on the French Revolution. It argues that the thesis of an “Atlantic Revolution” put forward by Robert Palmer and Jacques Godechot in the 1950s in fact grew out of debates in interwar France. French historians first took a “global turn” with the establishment of the Institut International de l’Histoire de la Révolution Française (IIHRF) in 1936. Its founding members, Philippe Sagnac and Boris Mirkine-Guétzevitch, were committed to making revolutionary historiography an instrument for promoting internationalism in an age of immense diplomatic insecurity. The IIHRF was pioneering for the geographical range, interdisciplinary focus, and extended chronology it brought to studying the French Revolution. It was also, however, profoundly marked by French geopolitical interests and deep-rooted assumptions of cultural superiority connected to the study of “civilization.” The closure of the IIHRF after the Nazi occupation, and its relocation to New York, inaugurated an intriguing new chapter in Franco-American intellectual exchanges. In the wake of the war, however, the diplomatic value of the IIHRF was redundant and its intellectual agenda eclipsed by the rise of alternative ways of conceiving of international history, as well as the challenge of decolonization. The evolution and ultimate failure of the IIHRF raise intriguing questions about the changing significance of 1789 as a political landmark, the different methodologies of “international,” “Atlantic,” and “world” history, and the reshaping of research paradigms at the dawn of the Cold War.
Citation
Stammers, T. (2020). La mondialisation de la Révolution française (vers 1930-1960) : origines et eclipse d'un paradigme historiographique. Annales (English ed. Online), 74(2), 297-335. https://doi.org/10.1017/ahss.2020.10
Journal Article Type | Article |
---|---|
Acceptance Date | Mar 30, 2018 |
Online Publication Date | Jul 23, 2020 |
Publication Date | 2020-06 |
Deposit Date | Mar 8, 2019 |
Publicly Available Date | Mar 11, 2020 |
Journal | Annales, histoire, sciences sociales. |
Print ISSN | 2398-5682 |
Electronic ISSN | 2268-3763 |
Publisher | Cambridge University Press |
Peer Reviewed | Peer Reviewed |
Volume | 74 |
Issue | 2 |
Pages | 297-335 |
DOI | https://doi.org/10.1017/ahss.2020.10 |
Public URL | https://durham-repository.worktribe.com/output/1306718 |
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Copyright Statement
This article will be published in a revised form in Annales. Histoire, Sciences Sociales http://doi.org/10.1017/ahss.2020.10. This version is published under a Creative Commons CC-BY-NC-ND. No commercial re-distribution or re-use allowed. Derivative works cannot be distributed. © Éditions de l’EHESS.
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