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Louis Sâebastien Mercier : revolution and reform in eighteenth-century Paris

Part of the Transits: Literature, Thought & Culture, 1650-1850 series
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French playwright, novelist, activist, and journalist Louis Sébastien Mercier (1740–1814) passionately captured scenes of social injustice in pre-Revolutionary Paris in his prolific oeuvre but today remains an understudied writer.

In this penetrating study—the first in English devoted to Mercier in decades—Michael Mulryan explores his unpublished writings and urban chronicles, Tableau de Paris (1781–88) and Le Nouveau Paris (1798), in which he identified the city as a microcosm of national societal problems, detailed the conditions of the laboring poor, encouraged educational reform, and confronted universal social ills.

Mercier’s rich writings speak powerfully to the sociopolitical problems that continue to afflict us as political leaders manipulate public debate and encourage absolutist thinking, deepening social divides.

An outcast for his polemical views during his lifetime, Mercier has been called the founder of modern urban discourse, and his work a precursor to investigative journalism.

This sensitive study returns him to his rightful place among Enlightenment thinkers.

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£134.00
Product Details
168448488X / 9781684484881
Hardback
848.609
15/09/2023
United States
English
272 pages : illustrations (black and white, and colour)
24 cm