Revolutionary Acts: Theater, Democracy, and the French Revolution

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JHU Press, Aug 26, 2005 - History - 275 pages

In Revolutionary Acts Susan Maslan shows how theater played a pivotal role in Revolutionary France, positioning the theatrical stage as a battleground on which Parisian audiences, actors and playwrights, and political authorities fought to shape the newly emerging democracy.

Examining the production, performance, and reception of Parisian plays between 1789 and 1794, Maslan sheds new light on two issues central to the political cultures of Paris and France: the nature of political representation—specifically the problematic relationship between direct democracy and representative democracy—and the correlative problem of transparency and its relation to theatricality.

While traditional scholarship emphasizes the influence of newspapers and books on the French Revolution, Maslan's erudite analysis reveals the rich and powerful impact of theater on France's fledgling democracy.

 

Contents

Theater
25
Molière Rousseau
74
Revolutionary
125
Domestic
183
Notes
217
Bibliography
253
Index
267
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About the author (2005)

Susan Maslan is an associate professor of French at the University of California–Berkeley.

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