From Enlightenment to Revolution: Rethinking the Debate
Présentation
The notion that the Enlightenment was at the origins of the French Revolution is as old as the French Revolution itself. Debate over the precise relationship between the Enlightenment and the French Revolution has always been contentious and often infused with political implications. Indeed, the debate is itself a testament to the politics of each age that has engaged in it. In the nineteenth century, conservative efforts to link the Enlightenment to the Revolution – to see Voltaire and d’Holbach as paving the way towards the guillotine – could be a means of discrediting modernity altogether. During the Cold War, as socialists and liberals fought to lay exclusive claim the soul of democracy, the Enlightenment was seen often seen as riven with ‘liberal’ and ‘collectivist’ elements, and it was common to try to link the Terror to particular strands of Enlightenment thought. By the 1990s, debate over the relationship between the Enlightenment and French Revolution attained a particularly high degree of sophistication. Three main lines of interpretation were advanced. The Enlightenment contained destabilizing discourses that, once activated in 1789, allowed politics to run amok; the Enlightenment gave rise to a lively, irreverent genre of print that desacralized Old Regime institutions, notably the monarchy and the Church; and finally, rising literacy rates and the explosion of print had the effect of making readers become skeptical about what they read and, by implication, of authority in general.
While these three lines of interpretations have spawned a generation of scholarship, historians have not, of late, reflected on the debate itself. We believe that it is timely to rethink the relationship between the Enlightenment and French Revolution in light of new research and new preoccupations. The recent turn to political economy among scholars (and rising interest in it among the public) and new conceptions about political violence (Carl Schmitt, research on emotions, cultural anthropological analyses of honor, gift-exchange and vengeance) offer the opportunity to rethink this relationship. The question of how the Enlightenment figured in the French Revolution is, of course, perennial. But how do the failed attempts to democratize many countries around the world since 1989 (particularly the Muslim world after 2001) and the near collapse of global financial capitalism in 2008 alter the way we understand the forces that can derail democracy? Does our story of the Enlightenment’s relationship to the Revolution need to take into account religion, emotions, economic interests and cultural dynamics involving honor and vengeance? If so, how did those factors figure within Enlightenment culture?
Programme
9h30 – 9h45
Opening Remarks, Keith Baker
9h50 – 10h30
S’il arrive quelque heureuse révolution dans le monde… Lumières et Révolution en contexte global
Antoine Lilti (EHESS)
10h30 – 11h10
From Tocqueville to Polanyi: Economic Liberalism and Revolutionary Crisis
Charles Walton (University of Warwick)
11h10 – 11h30 Break
11h30 – 12h10
L'enjeu des émotions révolutionnaires, enjeu théorique ou enjeu thématique ?
Sophie Wahnich (CNRS)
12h10 – 12h50
The Sciences and the French Revolution
Stéphane Van Damme (European University Institute)
13h – 14h Déjeuner
14h – 14h40
Sociabilité et voyage entre Lumières et Révolution
Pierre-Yves Beaurepaire (Université de Nice)
14h40 – 15h20
Bourgeoisie, capitalisme, Révolution : les mots et les choses
Philippe Minard (Université de Paris VIII)
15h20 – 15h40 Break
15h40 – 16h20
Virtue and corruption: from strategic discourse to revolutionary ideology
Marisa Linton (Kingston University)
16h20 – 17h00
Counterfactual: A Revolution without Enlightenment? The Case of Equality
Darrin McMahon (Dartmouth College)
17h – 17h30
Table ronde
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