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Charles Walton

Professeur
Université de Warwick
From Eden to Terror: Reciprocity, Redistribution and the French Revolution
01 octobre 2015 - 30 juin 2016
Histoire
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Charles Walton is Reader in the History Department at the University of Warwick. He is a specialist of Old Regime, Enlightenment and Revolutionary France. He is the author of Policing Public Opinion in the French Revolution: The Culture of Calumny and the Problem of Free Speech (Oxford University Press, 2009), translated into French with a preface by Jean-Clément Martin: La Liberté d’expression en Révolution: Les moeurs, l’honneur, la calomnie (PUR, 2014). He is also the editor of Into Print: Limits and Legacies of the Enlightenment, Essays in Honor of Robert Darnton. He is currently working on reciprocity and redistribution in the French Revolution and is co-directing (with Claudia Stein) a three-year Leverhulme Trust funded network, ‘Rights, Duties and the Politics of Obligation: Socioeconomic Rights in History’.

My research project offers new answers to the old question: Why did the French Revolution radicalize after 1789? My approach emphasizes the politics of interests . Prior interpretations, which stress circumstances, counterrevolution or political ideology, leave little room for the role of interests. Drawing on the anthropological concepts of redistribution and reciprocity, I show how commitments to economic liberalism, before and during the Revolution, radicalized politics. As Karl Polanyi noted in The Great Transformation (1944), the more authorities try to evacuate material demands from politics, the more those demands storm back into politics with a vengeance. Although he did not apply this insight to the French Revolution, it helps us understand the political dynamics of the late 1780s and early 1790s. The failure to meet redistributive demands for rents (interest on the public debt) and for bread (due to commitments to free-markets) weakened the ability of each successive regime to command allegiances. As redistribution dried up at the top, it exploded in radicalized form at the level of local politics (1792-1794).

École doctorale organisée par P. Bastien, résident 2016-2017 de l'IEA de Paris
01 Juil 2019 08:30 -
05 Juil 2019 17:00,
Paris :
Gouvernance et régulations sociales, XVIIIe - XXe siècles
École doctorale organisée par P. Bastien, résident 2016-2017 de l'IEA de Paris
02 Juil 2018 08:30 -
06 Juil 2018 17:00,
Paris :
Paris en révolutions, XVIIIe-XIXe s.
Journées d'étude organisées par C. Walton (résident de l'IEA de Paris), N. Delalande et P.-A. Rosental (Sciences Po)
19 Mai 2016 09:30 -
20 Mai 2016 17:30,
Paris :
Who Pays for Socioeconomic Rights? The Politics of Financial and Moral Obligation
Colloque organisé par F. Tarragoni (Université Paris Diderot), avec le soutien de l'IEA de Paris
04 Mai 2016 09:00 -
04 Mai 2016 18:30,
Paris :
Les révolutions comme discontinuités. Subjectivités, changements politiques et émancipations
Atelier de recherche organisé par K. Baker, C. Walton (résidents de l'IEA de Paris), et A. Lilti (EHESS)
11 Mar 2016 09:00 -
11 Mar 2016 18:00,
Paris :
From Enlightenment to Revolution: Rethinking the Debate
Atelier de recherche organisé par Charles Walton, résident de l'IEA de Paris
18 Nov 2015 14:00 -
18 Nov 2015 17:00,
Paris :
Towards a History of Socioeconomic Rights
501
2015-2016
Époque contemporaine (1789-...)
Europe occidentale
charles.walton@warwick.ac.uk