
Title
- Thomas Jefferson And The French Revolution, 1785-1800
Attribution
Conor Cruise O’BrienPublication Details
BookUniversity of Chicago Press1996Availability
LOCATION CALL # STATUS (LOWER LEVEL) E332.45 .O27 1996 AVAILABLE New Feature: Text this to your cellphone
View record in LOLA catalogDescription
This is an important work that makes an essential contribution to the overall picture of Jefferson.”?Booklist “O’Brien traces the roots of Jefferson’s admiration for the revolution in France but notes that Jefferson’s enthusiasm for France cooled in the 1790s, when French egalitarian ideals came to threaten the slave-based Southern economy that Jefferson supported.”?Library Journal “In O’Brien’s opinion, it’s time that Americans face the fact that Jefferson, long seen as a champion of the ‘wronged masses,’ was a racist who should not be placed on a pedestal in an increasingly multicultural United States.”?Boston Phoenix “O’Brien makes a well-argued revisionist contribution to the literature on Jefferson.”?Kirkus Reviews “O’Brien is right on target . (automatically summarized from Amazon.com)Subject
Places in this work
Notes
- Certain to be as controversial and explosive as it is elegant and learned, The Long Affair is Conor Cruise O’Brien’s examination of Jefferson, as man and icon, through the critical lens of the French Revolution. Unable to speak the language, endowed with few close friends or colleagues, and curiously detached from Parisian intellectual life, Thomas Jefferson seemed an alienated and somewhat homesick Virginia farmer during most of his tenure as American Minister to France. But the advent of the French Revolution seized Jefferson with a new fervor, and in 1789 he returned to the United States an ardent admirer and ally of that cause. O’Brien argues that Jefferson, though enthralled with the ideological mystique of the French Revolution, nevertheless retained a shrewd political pragmatism, skillfully exploiting the Revolution’s popularity with the American public. Ultimately, O’Brien suggests, Jefferson’s egalitarian ideals came into conflict with his staunch political support for the slave-based Southern economy. Following the slave insurrection in Haiti inspired by the French Revolution, his revolutionary zeal was tempered and began to cool. Concluding with an evaluation of Jefferson’s current role in the system of American political beliefs, O’Brien seriously questions whether we can sustain Jefferson’s lofty status in an increasingly multiracial America, and he suggests a disturbing link between Jefferson’s vision and white supremacist, survivalist extremists. A provocative analysis of the supreme symbol of American history and political culture, The Long Affair will challenge our traditional perceptions of both Jeffersonian history and the Jeffersonian legacy
Contents
- Prelude - Four Americans in Paris, Circa 1785: Benjamin Franklin, John and Abigail Adams, Thomas Jefferson
- 1. A Lonely American: Thomas Jefferson, Minister Plenipotentiary at the Court of Louis XVI 1785-87
- 2. A Somewhat Clouded Crystal Ball: Jefferson as Witness of the Last Years of the Ancien Regime 1786-89
- 3. Bringing the True God Home: The French Revolution in American Politics after Jefferson’s Return 1789-91
- 4. Approach and Advent of the French Republic, One and Indivisible: 1791-92
- 5. French Revolution in America: The Mission of Citizen Charles-Edmond Genet April 1793 - January 1794
- 6. The Lingering End of the Long Affair: Jefferson and the French Revolution after Genet’s Mission 1794-1800
- 7. A Thematic Overview: Liberty, Slavery, and the Cult of the French Revolution
- Epilogue: Thomas Jefferson and the Impending Schism in the American Civil Religion
- Appendix. Madison Hemings’s Story
ISBN
- 0226616533
LCCN
Open Library ID
-

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